Motor
racing-Dan Gurney, all American racer, dead at 86
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[January 15, 2018]
(Reuters) - American racer Dan
Gurney, a Formula One and Le Mans 24 Hours winner in the 1960s who
started a trend by spraying champagne on the victory podium, died in
California on Sunday aged 86.
The news was announced by his wife Evi and family in a statement.
"With one last smile on his handsome face, Dan drove off into the
unknown just before noon today, January 14, 2018," it said.
The family said Gurney, whose Formula One career spanned one of the
most glamorous and dangerous periods of the sport's history from
1959 to 1970, had died of complications from pneumonia.
A winner also in IndyCar and NASCAR, and inventor of the 'Gurney
Flap' aerodynamic device, he was inducted into the Indianapolis Hall
of Fame after finishing second in the 1968 and 1969 Indy 500s and
third in 1970.
The son of an opera singer, Gurney made his Formula One debut with
Ferrari at the 1959 French Grand Prix in Reims and soon established
himself racing against some of the sport's all-time greats.
His first grand prix win came with Porsche at the 1962 French Grand
Prix in Rouen, followed up by another at the same circuit in 1964
when he took a first championship win for Brabham.
Gurney won again that season in Mexico City and then in 1966 set up
his own All American Racers, taking their first and only win at
Belgium's Spa-Francorchamps circuit in 1967 in the
beautifully-designed Eagle Weslake Mark I.
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2018/Jan/15/images/ads/current/charrons_bch041713.png)
It was also in 1967, after winning the Le Mans 24 Hours in a Ford
GT40 with AJ Foyt, that Gurney famously sprayed the champagne
around.
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"Dan's naughty nature took over and he used the bottle like a
firehose on everybody out of sheer exuberance, a relief for finally
having won the race after 10 tries," Evi Gurney recalled to Reuters
on the 50th anniversary last year.
"Thousands have done it since, exactly the way he did."
Gurney ended his career at McLaren in 1970, stepping in after the
death of the team's founder Bruce McLaren for three races.
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2018/Jan/15/images/ads/current/mcquellons_lda_LUAL_2017.png)
Despite not winning a championship, Gurney remains the second most
successful U.S. Formula One driver in terms of race wins (four)
after 1978 champion Mario Andretti (12).
Phil Hill, champion in a 1961 season when Gurney finished third
equal with Britain's Stirling Moss, won only three.
"I was first inspired by him when I was in midgets dreaming of being
like him," said Andretti, among many expressing condolences on
Twitter.
"He understood me better than anyone else, which is why he wrote the
foreword for my book in 2001."
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin in London, editing by Greg Stutchbury)
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