DENNIS PASSA
AP Sports Writer
BRISBANE, Australia (AP) — Jack Brabham, the three-time Formula One champion who famously pushed his car to the finish line to claim his first season title, died Monday at his Gold Coast home. He was 88.
The Australian driver — known as Sir Jack in racing paddocks around the world after he was knighted in 1979 — won world titles in 1959 and 1960 and became the only F1 driver to win a world championship in a car of his own construction — the rear-engined BT19 — which he drove to the title in 1966.
The following year the Brabham team won its second successive world championship when New Zealander Denny Hulme drove the BT20 to victory. Brabham won his final Grand Prix race in South Africa in 1970 before retiring from F1 at the age of 44.
Brabham continued to compete at different venues after his F1 retirement and his three sons, Geoff, Gary and David also had professional racing careers. Two of his grandsons, Matthew and Sam, are racing in the U.S. and Britain.
“It’s a very sad day for all of us,” Brabham’s youngest son, David, said in a statement. “He lived an incredible life, achieving more than anyone would ever dream of and he will continue to live on through the astounding legacy he leaves behind.”
In March 2009, David Brabham helped celebrate a 50-year anniversary for his father. Sebring International Raceway in Florida was the venue where Brabham wrapped up his first Formula 1 championship on Dec. 12, 1959, pushing his Cooper-Climax T51 across the finish line for a fourth-place finish.
“I was leading the race right up to the last 500 yards and the car ran out of petrol,” Brabham said in an interview with The Associated Press at his home in 2009. “I coasted to about 50 yards away and I pushed the car over the line. If I would have received any assistance I would have been disqualified. I managed to finish fourth, which was enough to win the championship.”
Brabham was not well enough to make the Sebring trip in 2009, so David re-enacted his father’s famous finish.
Jack Brabham’s career accomplishments were lengthy. In addition to his three world titles and 126 races from 1955 to 1970, he won the constructors’ championship in 1966 and 1967. He had 14 Grand Prix wins and 31 podium finishes.
Alan Jones, the Australian driver who won the 1980 F1 title, said Brabham was an inspiration to following generations.
“Built, designed and engineered his own car and won the world championship,” Jones said. “That’s an unbelievable feat which hasn’t been done before and I don’t think will ever be done again. He opened up the eyes of the world to Aussie talent.”
Born on April 2, 1926, in the southern Sydney suburb of Hurstville, John Arthur Brabham grew up driving and maintaining his father’s fruit and vegetable delivery vehicles. After a brief career in engineering, he joined the Australian Air Force as a flight mechanic and later set up his own engineering works in Sydney and became a pilot.
He won four Australian championships between 1948 and 1951. In 1955, Brabham moved to England and teamed up with John and Charles Cooper to make his Grand Prix debut at Aintree, England.
“Always a man of few words — his nickname ‘Black Jack’ referred to both his dark hair and his propensity for maintaining a shadowy silence — he avoided small talk and was undemonstrative in the extreme,” the Confederation of Australian Motorsport said in a statement. “But behind the wheel he was anything but shy and retiring. He put his head down and drove exceedingly forcefully.”
Brabham returned to Australia after he retired and his new interests included developing a farm, car dealership and aviation company. He was also a spokesman for a major Japanese automaker and maintained his interest in the sport, visiting numerous major international races.
“On track he was always the toughest of tough competitors, tough sometimes to the point at which I’d wonder ‘how could such a nice bloke out of a car grow such horns and a tail inside one!'” British great Stirling Moss wrote about Brabham in the introduction to a book about one of his biggest race rivals.
“If you ever raced against Jack you’d really know you’d been in a race … (he) played the game as if your life depends on it, no quarter asked, and absolutely none given. To his natural driving ability he added a deeper technical understanding.”
“That was a reasonable comment,” Brabham told the AP, smiling, when he read the excerpt.
Indianapolis Motor Speedway President J. Douglas Boles described Brabham, a four-time Indianapolis 500 starter, as “the patriarch of a racing dynasty.”
“Every time an Indy car runs at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, you can find roots that trace back to Jack Brabham’s rear-engined Cooper Climax T54 that he drove to 9th place in the 1961 Indianapolis 500,” Boles said. “In addition to starting the rear-engine revolution at IMS, Brabham competed … and designed race cars that competed in the 500.”
Later in life, Brabham suffered from poor hearing and macular degeneration that prevented him from reading road signs, making driving difficult.
He said a kidney illness “really clipped my wings,” but he lived a busy life in a home overlooking the eighth hole of a resort golf course and sprinkled with mementos of his feats. Those included a glass-encased model replica of the Cooper Climax that he pushed over that Sebring finish line, and photos of the great driver with prime ministers, sporting personalities and fellow competitors.
“The big aim now is to go out without an enemy in the world — I’m going to outlive,” them, he said in the 2009 interview.
He is survived by his second wife, Margaret, and his three sons.
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AP Sports Writer John Pye contributed to this report.
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