Chris Amon Explained

Chris Amon
Birth Name:Christopher Arthur Amon
Birth Date:20 July 1943
Birth Place:Bulls, New Zealand
Death Place:Rotorua, New Zealand
Nationality: New Zealander
Years:
Races:108 (96 starts)
Championships:0
Wins:0
Podiums:11
Points:83
Poles:5
Fastest Laps:3
First Race:1963 Monaco Grand Prix
Last Race:1976 Canadian Grand Prix
Module1:
Subbox:yes
Best Finish:1st
Class Wins:1

Christopher Arthur Amon (; 20 July 1943 – 3 August 2016) was a New Zealand motor racing driver. He was active in Formula One racing in the 1960s and 1970s, and is widely regarded as one of the best F1 drivers never to win a championship Grand Prix. His reputation for bad luck was such that fellow driver Mario Andretti once joked that "if he became an undertaker, people would stop dying". Former Ferrari Technical Director Mauro Forghieri stated that Amon was "by far the best test driver I have ever worked with. He had all the qualities to be a World Champion but bad luck just wouldn't let him be".[1]

Apart from driving, Chris Amon also ran his own Formula One team for a short period in 1974. Away from Formula One, Amon had some success in sports car racing, teaming with co-driver Bruce McLaren to win the 24 Hours of Le Mans race in .[2]

Early life

Amon was born in Bulls, New Zealand, and attended Whanganui Collegiate School. He was the only child of wealthy sheep-owners Ngaio and Betty Amon. He learned to drive at the age of six, taught by a farm worker on the family farm. On leaving school, he persuaded his father to buy him an Austin A40 Special, which he entered in some minor local races and hillclimbs along with practice on the family farm.[3] He progressed to a 1.5-litre Cooper and then an old 2.5-litre Maserati 250F, but only began to draw attention when he drove the Cooper-Climax T51 which Bruce McLaren had used to win his maiden Grand Prix.[4]

In 1962 Amon entered the Cooper for the New Zealand winter series, but was hampered by mechanical problems. However, Scuderia Veloce entered him in a similar car, and, in the rain at Lakeside, he performed well. One of the spectators there was the English racing driver Reg Parnell who persuaded Amon to come to England and race for his team. In a test at Goodwood Amon continued to impress and was on the pace in the Goodwood International Trophy and Aintree 200 pre-season races.

Racing career

1960s

1963

For the 1963 Formula One season the Parnell team were using the year old Lola Mk4A, powered by 1962 specification Climax V8 engines. Amon was teamed with the very experienced Maurice Trintignant for the first race of the season at Monaco and his Grand Prix career started with what was to become typical bad luck: Trintignant's Climax developed a misfire, so he took over Amon's car.

At the 1963 Belgian Grand Prix, Amon was partnered by Lucien Bianchi and started ahead of him from 15th position. After nine laps, however, an oil fire ended his race. He continued to experience mechanical problems at the Dutch, Mexican and German Grands Prix; and after an accident in practice for the Italian Grand Prix left him hanging out of his car's cockpit with three broken ribs, he missed both the Italian and United States rounds.

Amon usually qualified in the midfield and generally outpaced his teammates, who included his good friend Mike Hailwood. His best results of the year were seventh at the French and British Grands Prix. During this time, however, Amon's social life was attracting as much attention as his driving. He was a member of the Ditton Road Flyers, the social set named after the road in London where Amon shared an apartment with American Peter Revson, Hailwood and Tony Maggs.[5]

Parnell was nonetheless impressed with Amon's results in what was regarded as less-than-competitive machinery and promoted him to team leader. Parnell died from peritonitis in January 1964 and his son Tim took over the team.

1964

In a series of four pre-season races in Britain and Italy, Amon recorded three fifth places at Snetterton, Silverstone and Syracuse. He failed to qualify for the first F1 race of the season, the Monaco GP, but at the next race, the Dutch GP, he scored his first World Championship points. The rest of his season, however, was blighted by mechanical problems.

1965

Parnell was offered BRM engines for 1965, but only if it ran Richard Attwood as its regular driver. Reluctantly, Parnell agreed and Attwood took Amon's place. Spotting an opportunity, Bruce McLaren quickly signed Amon for his new McLaren team, but when no second McLaren F1 car materialised, Amon could only drive in sports car races.

At the French GP Amon rejoined Parnell to stand in for an injured Attwood. Amon also competed in a Formula Two race in Stuttgart and won.[6] He returned to Germany for the German GP as second Parnell driver, but mechanical failure again forced an early retirement. His last drive before Attwood's return, a non-championship race in Enna, Sicily, also ended in retirement.

1966

During 1966 Amon continued to race for McLaren in Can-Am. He was intended to drive the second McLaren M2B but difficulties with engine supply meant that the team never made the intended expansion to two cars. (James Garner's character Pete Aron's helmet and car livery in the film Grand Prix were modelled on Amon driving a McLaren, which caused the movie makers to have to encourage other cars to be painted in the 'Yamura' colours and other drivers (Bruce McLaren included) to wear Amon-style helmets.)

However, an opportunity arose to drive for the Cooper F1 team after Richie Ginther left them for Honda. Amon drove for Cooper at the French GP and was scheduled to drive for them for the rest of the season, until the more successful John Surtees left Scuderia Ferrari to join Cooper and Amon found himself dropped.

Amon made one other F1 appearance during the year, driving a Brabham BT11 powered by an old 2-litre BRM engine at the Italian GP under the banner of "Chris Amon Racing". He failed to qualify.

Amon did however, score his biggest success to date when he partnered Bruce McLaren in a 7-litre Ford GT40 Mark II and Ken Miles to Ford's dead-heat "photo-finish" after Miles was instructed to slow down despite leading at the Le Mans 24-hour race,[7] spearheading a formation finish. He subsequently received an invitation to meet Enzo Ferrari at the Ferrari home in Maranello, where he signed to race for Ferrari in 1967 alongside Lorenzo Bandini, Mike Parkes and Ludovico Scarfiotti.

1967

Amon's first year with Ferrari did not begin auspiciously. En route to Brands Hatch for the pre-season Formula One Race of Champions, he crashed his road car and, following race practice, had to withdraw. Tragedy then struck the Ferrari team when Bandini died following a crash during the 1967 Monaco Grand Prix, Mike Parkes broke both his legs at the Belgian Grand Prix and, in the aftermath, Ludovico Scarfiotti went into temporary retirement. Amon, therefore, became Ferrari's only driver for the rest of the season, until joined by Jonathan Williams for the final race in Mexico. Amon scored his first podium in his first official outing for the Scuderia in Monaco and at the end of 1967 had achieved four third places finishing fifth in the Drivers' Championship, in what was going to be the most successful season of his career.

Amon's Ferrari contract also included sports car racing and he began 1967 by winning the Daytona 24 Hours[8] and 1000km Monza events with Bandini in the 4-litre Ferrari 330-P4. He finished the year partnering Jackie Stewart to a second place at the BOAC 500, thereby clinching the manufacturer's world championship for Ferrari by one point over Porsche.

1968

1968 was the year aerodynamics first played a significant role in F1 car design and Amon worked with engineer Mauro Forghieri to place aerofoils on the Ferrari 312.[9]

In January 1968 Amon had returned home to New Zealand and Australia to compete in the 1968 Tasman Series which was used by many of the top Formula One drivers as a warm up series to the World Championship. For the 1968 series Ferrari decided to use the 2.4 engines with a new Dino 166 F2 chassis rather than a downsized 3-litre V12. Using the 246T Amon won the first two rounds of the Tasman Series, including the 1968 New Zealand Grand Prix, before narrowly losing the series to the Lotus-Ford of Jim Clark. The Dino 246 Tasmania was better handling than Clark's Lotus 49T which was still wingless and a difficult proposition. Impressed by Amon's driving in the NZ rounds, Ferrari dispatched a new four-valve version of the 2.4 V6 for the Australian rounds and this gave another 15 hp,[10] but with lesser reliability which, combined with the fact Clark was the best driver in the world at the time, cost Amon the series, although in the final round at Sandown Park he duelled wheel to wheel with Clark before being pipped at the line.[11]

After the first race of the F1 season in South Africa, Amon achieved pole positions in three of the following four races (at the Spanish, Belgian and Dutch Grands Prix) but ever-present mechanical problems meant he secured only a single Championship point from them. Throughout the rest of the season he never qualified lower than fifth place and nearly scored victories at the British and Canadian rounds and he suffered a 100 mph crash in Italy which demolished his car.[12] In Britain, he duelled to the line with Jo Siffert's Lotus 49B and in Canada he dominated the race despite a malfunctioning clutch. Seventeen laps from the finish, however, his car's transmission failed and a distraught Amon had to be consoled by Jacky Ickx. From at least ten promising starts that season he was only able to finish five races and score ten Championship points. His best finish was second place to Siffert's Lotus-Cosworth at the British Grand Prix.

Outside F1, Amon was runner-up in the Formula Two race at Zolder, Belgium, testing the Dino 166 F2. He also came third in that year's BRDC International Trophy.

1969

Amon began 1969 with success driving the Dino engined 246 Tasmania in the Tasman Series that included winning both the New Zealand and Australian Grands Prix.[13] In straight fights, he beat new Gold Leaf Lotus team leader, Jochen Rindt, into second in the races at Pukekohe and Sandown.[14] He would ultimately win the seven race Tasman Series, probably the best of the seven-year 2.5-litre international formula series in this country and the nearest to World Championship level racing in New Zealand, with ferocious competition between Rindt, Graham Hill, Amon and Williams driver Piers Courage. It was actually much more serious racing than the McLaren dominated Can-Am series in the US in which the big sports cars required few gear changes and were essentially cruised to victory with little real competition, where the Tasman cars were essentially marginally lower power F1 cars, as difficult to drive as GP cars on unforgiving very dangerous narrow tracks. Amon finished with four wins, two-thirds and one retirement, but in Formula One his poor luck continued. Despite six starts from top-six positions, he was only able to achieve a third-place at the Dutch GP. The ageing 312 was still quick at the start of the season and after the Lotus 49Bs of Rindt and Graham Hill crashed spectacularly after high wing failure in the opening laps at Barcelona, Amon dominated the Spanish GP until the almost inevitable engine breakage on lap 56, 40 seconds ahead of Stewart's Matra. At Monaco Amon ran second to Stewart for the first 17 laps losing a second a lap to Stewart, but still gaining a second a lap on the third placed G. Hill who survived the race of attrition to win. Ferrari's F1 V12 engine was too unreliable and although its replacement had proven very fast in testing, it had suffered many mechanical breakages. Amon had no reason to believe it would be any more dependable than the V12, so although the new engine was clearly more powerful, he decided to leave Ferrari for a Cosworth DFV powered team. He was more influenced by views of Jackie Stewart and Jochen Rindt, who believed it was essential to be Ford DFV-powered to be competitive.

In addition to Formula One, Amon also drove for Ferrari in the 1969 International Championship for Makes, partnering Pedro Rodriguez to a fourth place in the BOAC 500 at Brands Hatch and coming second at the 12 Hours of Sebring, but retiring from the 1000km Nürburgring and 1000km Monza races, all in the Ferrari 312P sportscar. He also drove in a few Can-Am races. His last race for Ferrari would be the 1970 1000 km Monza, where he finished as runner-up.

1970s

1970

For the 1970 Formula One season, Amon made what was to be the first of several moves to smaller, newer teams. March Engineering had been formed the previous year to build custom chassis for Formulas 2 and 3, but quickly moved into F1, designing and building the March 701. Amon and Siffert were signed as drivers, with IndyCar driver Mario Andretti making an occasional appearance in a third car. March also sold their 701 chassis to Tyrrell, where Jackie Stewart drove it to its first victory in that year's Spanish GP.

Amon won the pre-season Silverstone International Trophy, but once the F1 season began he found himself prevented from converting good qualifying positions into good results. He qualified second behind Stewart's Tyrrell-March for the season-opening South African Grand Prix only for his own March to overheat within fourteen laps. Amon then qualified sixth for the Spanish Grand Prix only for his March's Ford-Cosworth DFV engine to expire within ten laps. He qualified and ran second in the 1970 Monaco Grand Prix until his suspension failed twenty laps from the finish. This was the race where Amon refused to drive unless his entry number was changed from 18 – the number under which his then teammate Lorenzo Bandini had crashed and died in Monaco – to 28.

Amon's close second place from a third-place start at the 1970 Belgian Grand Prix finally gave the March works team their first points finish. At that race, Amon set fastest lap at over 152 miles per hour, a lap record which still stands as of 2016, as it was the last race on the full-length Spa-Francorchamps circuit.[15] However, after qualifying fourth for the next race, the Dutch Grand Prix, his car's clutch broke after just one lap. Amon duplicated his Belgian result at the 1970 French Grand Prix,.[16] After a disappointing performance in the British GP at Brands Hatch where Amon finished fifth after being outqualified by tyro Ronnie Peterson in a private 701 on the same tyres, conflict with team boss Max Mosley over the non-delivery of three-quarters of Amon's expected pay for the season saw him provided with inferior DFVs and two backmarker 7th places in Austria and Italy, Amon finished the season strongly with strong drives to third at Mosport, fifth at Watkins Glen and fourth in Mexico. At Watkins Glen in the USGP he was robbed of a probably certain victory, in the opinion of March designer Robin Herd, by a puncture.[17]

By the end of the year, disagreements with March co-founders Mosley and Robin Herd meant that Amon had decided to move to another relatively new team, Matra.

1971

In 1971, Amon, now driving for the Matra factory team, once again scored a pre-season victory, this time at the Argentine Grand Prix. Once the Formula One season had begun, he managed to convert a third-place start at the Spanish GP into a third-place podium finish and scored a couple of fifth places in the South African and French GPs. Apart from these results, however, his run of poor F1 returns continued. He had a major accident at the Nürburgring and it sidelined him for the next race at the Österreichring. At the Italian GP he qualified in pole position and despite a poor start to the race looked as if he would capitalise on it – until the visor on his helmet became detached. Amon had to slow to avoid risking a major accident, thereby allowing other drivers to catch and overtake him. He finished the race in sixth place, scoring just one Championship point.

During the year Amon also competed in the non-championship Questor Grand Prix at the new Ontario Motor Speedway, where he qualified second and, despite suffering a puncture during the race, managed to finish fourth.

In the Tasman Series Amon started from fourth at the Levin Circuit and in the race, he battled with David Oxton and John Cannon but managed to finish third. Amon's third race at Wigram Airfield starting fifth and spun at the start to drop him to the back of the field but managed to climb up to fifth.[18]

1972

In the 1972 Formula One season, Amon, again driving for Matra achieved a handful of points-scoring finishes, but only one podium appearance, at the French GP. Here he achieved the fifth and final pole position of his career and was leading the race until a puncture forced him to pit. However, he climbed back through the field, breaking the circuit's lap record to finish third.

With the money he had made from motorsport, Amon decided to set up a racing engine firm with former BRM engineer Aubrey Woods. Amon Racing Engines supplied Formula 2 engines to a few drivers, but the company quickly became too expensive to run and was sold to March for a loss.

Matra decided to end their participation in Formula One at the end of 1972, so Amon found himself looking to return to March as a driver. The place, however, was given to Jean-Pierre Jarier, purportedly for financial reasons. Amon therefore signed for another recently formed F1 team, Tecno.

1973

Tecno had entered F1 the previous year, having developed a potentially powerful Flat 12 for F1. But their first year in F1 proved to be dismal so they jumped at the chance to sign Amon for the new season.[19] The testing of a new chassis designed by former Lotus and McLaren mechanic Allan McCall proved to be time-consuming. After its non-appearance for the Spanish GP, Amon and Tecno team manager David Yorke met with Enzo Ferrari to see if Amon could be released from his contract to develop the new Ferrari B3 for Ickx and Mezarrio, in a supposedly one off GP drive[20] at Monaco. Yorke rejected the release, and Amon admits he would not have left Ferrari if offered the drive for a season.

Unfortunately, the team went from bad to worse and wasn't able to field the Tecno PA123/6 until the fifth GP of the season, the Belgian GP. Amon managed to finish in sixth position. At Monaco the car qualified a useful 12th and chassis felt good[21] but Chris was unhappy with the car. He decided to concentrate on a still in-development Tecno chassis built by unproven designer Gordon Fowell. This was against the view of the Techno team and Sponsors Martini Rossi who required the car and driver to appear at races[22] While Amon commented at the time that it was "the best chassis I've ever sat in", it too proved virtually undriveable. Amon refused to drive the McCall designed Techno in the Swedish or German Gps[23] and withdrew from the Austrian GP after qualifying. By the time of the Austrian GP, four races from the end of the season, Amon's patience had run out and he left the team. He would later claim that the months he spent with the team "felt like ten [seasons]".

Tyrrell offered Amon a third car – the 005 – in which to drive the last two races of the season. After a mediocre first outing at the Canadian GP, he and Jackie Stewart withdrew from the final race of the year, the United States GP, following the death of their teammate François Cevert during qualifying.

1974

For the 1974 F1 season, Amon revived Chris Amon Racing. Gordon Fowell designed the car, the AF101, which featured a single central fuel tank, titanium torsion bars and a forward driving position. Structurally, however, it proved to be weak and was not ready for an F1 appearance until the fourth race of the season, the Spanish GP. Amon was only able to qualify 23rd, thanks to brake-disc vibration that only became worse with the tyres for the wet race that followed. Despite cautious driving, a brake shaft finally broke and Amon was forced to retire after 22 laps.

Following further work and testing, Amon returned for the Monaco GP and qualified twentieth, but, thanks to mechanical problems, he was unable to start the race. Further problems and illness meant Amon was not able to reappear with the F101 until the Italian GP, three races from the end of the season, but this time he was unable to qualify. That sealed the fate of both the car and Chris Amon Racing, leaving Amon to drive the season's last two races with the faltering BRM team. He would later reveal that he had turned down a chance to join the Brabham team earlier in the season.

1975

Amon contested the 1975 F5000 Tasman series against only Australasian drivers. He qualified on the front row of three of the four New Zealand rounds and scored a victory at Teretonga in January 1975 in rainy conditions by 24.2 seconds. In the Australian rounds, the competition was always harder with more good cars and the locals on their own tracks. Amon had a frustrating series of races unable to pass, South Australian Johnnie Walker, in a superior Lola T332 chassis with Repco-engineered V8. At Surfers Paradise, running from the back of the grid he managed to eventually pass Walker by widening the braking zone in the only corner where overtaking was usually possible. Amon brushed the edge of the track on repeated laps, got extra grip and passed Walker to take the lead. He had been forced to miss most of the practice session, when Customs seized his car's gearbox. In the race, the brilliant effort went for nothing as the Chev engine blew.[24] At Oran Park and Adelaide he followed Walker the whole way to 4th and 3rd unable to pass. In the final deciding race for the Tasman Series with Brown, Walker and Lawrence still in contention, Walker lost his T332 on the first lap and it demolished on wooden barriers surrounding Sandown's car and horse racing tracks. Amon was never in contention and finished 4th. Amon intended to compete in F5000 in both Europe and the US in 1975 but started in only one round of both series, managing a pole in one Shellsport round in the UK and a 4th place overall at the Long Beach GP in a two heat race. He used different Talon F5000 cars for both races. Apart from these successes, Amon's racing career seemed once again to have stalled. Yet the speed he showed in qualifying for a couple of UK F5000 races encouraged Mo Nunn of the small Ensign team to give him a race driving the Ensign N175. Amon managed 7th in the non-championship Swiss GP at Dijon, which led to two more drives for the team, finishing 12th in both the Austrian and Italian GPs. At Monza after a long pit stop he finally ran at competitive pace, running 4 laps down but keeping pace with the leading Ferrari 312T of Niki Lauda for a number of laps. Progressive evaluation of the possibilities of what was slowing the N175 led Amon to change the airbox alignment on the day of the Italian GP and this resulted in a 2-second gain (much like the change in air cooler position that lost and gained two seconds on Hunt's McLaren M23 resolved by the 1976 French GP). Ironically Amon never raced the N175 again and the high airboxes had been banned by the time N176 ran at Jarama the following year, but the flash of testing and driving genius was enough to give Amon another chance. Although the results were unremarkable, he and Nunn worked well together, so Amon joined Ensign for the 1976 F1 season.

1976

Ensign's first race of the season was the South African GP where Amon qualified 18th and showed a revival of form, climbing to seventh place, in the old Ensign N174 and contesting sixth with Mario Andretti in the Parnelli Ford, in the last laps before a last minute refueling stop left him 14th. Thereafter results began to improve, with Amon qualifying 17th and finishing eighth in the USA West GP; qualifying tenth and finishing fifth in the Spanish GP; and then qualifying eighth for the Belgian GP. More points then seemed likely from the race until his car lost a wheel 19 laps from the finish and Amon was lucky to escape unhurt from the ensuing accident. He then achieved a third-place grid position start for the Swedish GP using a Nicholson rebuilt Cosworth for the first time and in the race looked as if he would join Tyrrell drivers Jody Scheckter and Patrick Depailler on the podium, until suspension failure threw him from the track after 38 laps.

Amon had again been lucky to escape serious injury and decided to miss the next race, the French GP. He returned for the British GP, qualifying in sixth and running fourth in the race when his Ford-Cosworth DFV engine developed a water leak. Rather than risk losing an engine, his team called him in to retire.

At the German GP problems dogged his attempts to qualify well, but it was Niki Lauda's crash during the second lap of the race that had a far greater impact. Amon refused to restart the race and Nunn fired him from the team. Amon declared his retirement from the sport and returned to New Zealand.

"I'd seen too many people fried in racing cars at that stage. When you've driven past Bandini, Schlesser, Courage and Williamson, another shunt like that was simply too much. It was a personal decision..."
(Amon, on his retirement in 1976)[25]
However, Walter Wolf contacted Amon and persuaded him to drive for his Wolf–Williams team in the North American races near the end of the season. After recording some promising times in preparation for the Canadian GP, however, Amon was involved in a heavy collision with another car during qualifying and once again was lucky to walk away unharmed. He then did not take part in either the Canadian or United States Grands Prix.

1977

Amon turned down an offer of a full-time F1 drive for 1977, but did attempt a return to Can-Am racing in 1977 with a Wolf-Dallara WD1. However, after only one race he quit, saying "I'm just not enjoying this anymore". His place was taken by the young and then unknown Canadian Gilles Villeneuve, whom Amon would, later that year, recommend to Enzo Ferrari.

In the meantime, Amon returned once again to New Zealand, this time to retire from F1 motor racing for good.

2000s

2003Amon came out of retirement for a one-off appearance in the 2003 Dunlop Targa New Zealand with motorsport commentator Murray Walker as his navigator.[26] The pair completed the week-long Auckland to Wellington Tarmac Rally in a Toyota Camry Sportivo, the same car previously used by Walker and Colin Bond in Australia's Targa Tasmania.

Retirement

After his retirement from F1, Amon dedicated himself to running the family farm in New Zealand's Manawatū District for many years.[27] After retiring from farming, he lived in Taupō in New Zealand's North Island. In the early 1980s he became more well known in New Zealand from test-driving vehicles on the TV motoring series Motor Show and later consulted for Toyota New Zealand, tuning the 1984 Toyota Corolla and subsequent cars for sale there. He also appeared in TV commercials for the company, where much was made of the acclaim he won from Enzo Ferrari. Amon participated in the 2004 EnergyWise Rally where he won ahead of Brian Cowan. Amon drove a Toyota Prius for the event.[28]

In the 1993 Queen's Birthday Honours, Amon was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire, for services to motor sport.

Amon was involved in the design of the upgraded Taupo Motorsport Park circuit, used for the New Zealand round of the 2006–07 A1 Grand Prix season in January 2007. At the New Zealand Festival of Motor Racing in 2011, Amon's life and career were honoured with a selection of his cars being driven and also used the event to raise funds for the Bruce McLaren trust.[29] Amon was also honoured at the festival in January 2013.[30]

Death

Amon died in Rotorua Hospital on 3 August 2016, aged 73, of cancer.[31] He was survived by his wife (they married in 1977) their three children and their grandchildren.[32] One of his sons, James, is a qualified High Performance personal trainer. He trained Central Districts Stags cricket team,[33] [34] and was revealed to be Brendon Hartley's personal trainer.[35]

Legacy

Despite never winning a championship Formula One Grand Prix, Amon won two non-championship GPs, the Silverstone International Trophy, the 1000 km Monza, the Daytona 24 Hours, six Tasman Series races and one series championship, and, perhaps most significant of all, the famous 24 Heures du Mans (alongside Bruce McLaren). These races included many of Amon's otherwise more successful fellow Formula One drivers. Amon also remains the only driver from New Zealand and Oceania to have raced for Scuderia Ferrari in Formula One.

In Formula One, Chris Amon took part in 96 Grands Prix, achieving 5 poles, leading 183 laps in 7 races, reaching the podium 11 times and scoring a total of 83 Championship points. Amon holds the record for the most different makes of car raced by a Formula 1 World Championship driver, with thirteen.[36] A biography Forza Amon by journalist Eoin Young charts Amon's racing career and gives some insights into his personal life. The book makes clear one point on which Amon himself disagrees with most commentators, the issue of his bad luck. Amon has pointed out on several occasions that he competed for a decade and a half in Formula One and survived some serious accidents, notably in 1976, whilst others, including friends like Bruce McLaren, suffered serious injury and death. In 2008, motorsport journalist Alan Henry rated Chris Amon as his 13th greatest driver.[37]

Reflecting on the 1968 racing death of Jim Clark, Amon said: "If this can happen to Jimmy, what chance do the rest of us have? I think we all felt that. It seemed like we'd lost our leader."[38] [39] In 1995, Amon was inducted into the New Zealand Sports Hall of Fame.

Amon's name has been given to the Toyota Racing Series driver's championship trophy, and the International Scholarship to support drivers who win his trophy to further their careers in single-seater racing. The Toyota Racing Series serves as motorsport's version of "winter ball" in New Zealand during January and February. Following his death, his name was also lent to the Manfeild Autocourse in Feilding, Manawatū.

Racing record

Career summary

SeasonSeriesTeamRacesWinsPolesF/LapsPodiumsPointsPosition
1963Formula OneReg Parnell Racing600000NC
Australian Drivers' ChampionshipScuderia Veloce300000NC†
British Saloon Car ChampionshipSunbeam Talbot Ltd.100000NC
British Saloon Car Championship – Class B100000NC
1964Formula OneReg Parnell Racing80000216th
Tasman Series400000NC
Trophées de FranceMidland Racing Partnership20000218th
24 Hours of Le MansBriggs S. Cunningham10000N/ADSQ
1965British Formula TwoIan Raby Racing800000NC
Midland Racing Partnership
Formula OneReg Parnell Racing20000N/ANC
24 Hours of Le MansShelby-American Inc.10000N/ADNF
1966Can-AmBruce McLaren Motor Racing60012106th
British Sports Car Championship400130NC
Formula OneCooper Car Company100000NC
Chris Amon Racing10000
24 Hours of Le MansShelby-American Inc.11001N/A1st
1967Formula OneScuderia Ferrari100004205th
World Sportscar Championship32??2N/ANC
Can-AmNorth American Racing Team30000212th
Bill Harrah
24 Hours of Le MansScuderia Ferrari10000N/ADNF
24 Hours of Daytona11??1N/A1st
1968Formula OneScuderia Ferrari1103011010th
Tasman SeriesChris Amon82154362nd
European Formula TwoScuderia Ferrari200000NC
Can-AmModern Classic Motors100000NC
1969Can-AmChris Amon80013396th
McLaren Cars
Formula 1 Enterprises
Tasman SeriesScuderia Veloce74236441st
Formula OneScuderia Ferrari60001412th
24 Hours of Le Mans10000N/ADNF
1970Formula OneMarch Engineering130013238th
Can-Am300002811th
1971Formula OneEquipe Matra Sports100101911th
Tasman SeriesSTP Corporation50002155th
24 Hours of Le MansEquipe Matra-Simca10000N/ADNF
1972Formula OneEquipe Matra1101211210th
24 Hours of Le MansEquipe Matra-Simca Shell10000N/ADNF
1973European Touring Car Championship – Division 2BMW Motorsport51222327th
European Touring Car Championship21??2327th
British Saloon Car Championship000000NC
British Saloon Car Championship – Class D000000NC
Formula OneMartini Racing Team40000121st
Elf Team Tyrrell10000
24 Hours of Le MansBMW Motorsport10000N/ADNF
1974Formula OneTeam BRM200000NC
Chris Amon Racing10000
1975Tasman SeriesMcCormack Racing81011175th
Formula OneHB Bewaking Team Ensign200000NC
SCCA/USAC Formula 5000McCormack Racing100001213th
1976Formula OneTeam Ensign70000218th
Walter Wolf Racing00000
As Amon was a guest driver, he was ineligible for championship points.

Formula One World Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)

YearEntrantChassisEngine12 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16Pts
1963Reg Parnell RacingLola Mk4AClimax FWMV 1.5 V8MON
BEL
NED
FRA
GBR
GER
ITA
USANC0
Lotus 24BRM P56 1.5 V8MEX
RSA
1964Reg Parnell RacingLotus 25BRM P56 1.5 V8MON
NED
BEL
FRA
GBR
GER
USA
MEX
16th2
Climax FWMV 1.5 V8AUT
ITA
Reg Parnell RacingLotus 25BRM P56 1.5 V8RSAMONBELFRA
GER
ITAUSAMEXNC0
Ian Raby RacingBrabham BT3GBR
NED
1966Bruce McLaren Motor RacingMcLaren M2BFord 406 3.0 V8MON
BEL
GBR
NED
NC0
Cooper Car CompanyCooper T81Maserati 9/F1 3.0 V12FRA
GER
Chris Amon RacingBrabham BT11BRM P60 1.9 V8ITA
USAMEX
Scuderia Ferrari SpA SEFACFerrari 312/67Ferrari 242 3.0 V12MON
NED
BEL
FRA
GBR
GER
CAN
ITA
USA
MEX
5th20
Scuderia Ferrari SpA SEFACFerrari 312/67Ferrari 242 3.0 V12RSA
10th10
Ferrari 312/67/68ESP
MONBEL
Ferrari 312/68Ferrari 242C 3.0 V12NED
FRA
GBR
GER
ITA
CAN
USA
MEX
1969Scuderia Ferrari SpA SEFACFerrari 312/69Ferrari 255C 3.0 V12RSA
ESP
MON
NED
FRA
GBR
GERITACANUSAMEX12th4
March EngineeringMarch 701Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8RSA
ESP
MON
BEL
NED
FRA
GBR
GER
AUT
ITA
CAN
USA
MEX
8th23
Équipe Matra SportsMatra MS120BMatra MS71 3.0 V12RSA
ESP
MON
NED
FRA
GBR
GER
AUTITA
CAN
USA
11th9
1972Équipe MatraMatra MS120CMatra MS72 3.0 V12ARG
RSA
ESP
MON
BEL
GBR
10th12
Matra MS120DFRA
GER
AUT
ITA
CAN
USA
1973Martini Racing TeamTecno PA123BTecno Series-P 3.0 F12ARGBRARSAESPBEL
MON
SWEFRAGBR
NED
GERAUT
ITA21st1
Elf Team TyrrellTyrrell 005Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8CAN
USA
Chris Amon RacingAmon AF101Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8ARGBRARSAESP
BELMON
SWENEDFRAGBRGER
AUTITA
NC0
Team BRMBRM P201BRM P200 3.0 V12CAN
USA
HB Bewaking Team EnsignEnsign N175Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8ARGBRARSAESPMONBELSWENEDFRAGBRGERAUT
ITA
USANC0
Team EnsignEnsign N174Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8BRARSA
USW
ESP
18th2
Ensign N176BEL
MON
SWE
GBR
GER
AUTNEDITA
Walter Wolf RacingWolf–Williams FW05CAN
USAJPN

Non-Championship Formula One results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)

YearEntrantChassisEngine1234567891011121314
1963Reg Parnell RacingLola Mk4AClimax FWMV 1.5 V8LOMGLV
PAUIMOSYRAIN
INT
ROMSOL
KAN
DNA
MEDAUT
OULRAN
1964Reg Parnell RacingLotus 25BRM P56 1.5 V8DMT
NWTSYR
AIN
INT
SOL
MED
RAN
1965Scuderia Centro SudBRM P57BRM P56 1.5 V8ROCSYRSMTINT
Reg Parnell RacingLotus 25MED
RAN
1967Scuderia Ferrari SpA SEFACFerrari 312/66Ferrari 218 3.0 V12ROC
SPCINTSYROULESP
1968Scuderia Ferrari SpA SEFACFerrari 312/67Ferrari 242 3.0 V12ROC
INT
Ferrari 312/68Ferrari 242C 3.0 V12OUL
1969Scuderia Ferrari SpA SEFACFerrari 312/69Ferrari 255C 3.0 V12ROCINT
MADOUL
1970March EngineeringMarch 701Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8ROC
INT
OUL
1971Équipe Matra SportsMatra MS120Matra MS71 3.0 V12ARG
ROC
Matra MS120BQUE
SPRINT
RINOULVIC
1972Frank Williams Racing CarsPolitoys FX3Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8ROCBRAINTOULREPVIC
1974Chris Amon RacingAmon AF101Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8PREROCINT
1975HB Bewaking Team EnsignEnsign N175Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8ROCINTSUI
1976Team EnsignEnsign N174Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8ROC
INT

Complete Tasman Series results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)

YearTeamChassisEngine12345678RankPts
1964Reg Parnell RacingLola Mk4AClimax FPF 2.5 L4LEV
PUK
WIG
TER
SANWARLAKLONNC0
1968Chris AmonDino 246 TasmaniaFerrari 2.4 V6PUK
1
LEV
1
WIG
2
TER
SUR
WAR
SAN
LON
2nd36
1969Scuderia VeloceDino 246 TasmaniaFerrari 2.4 V6PUK
LEV
WIG
3
TER
LAK
1
WAR
SAN
1st44
1971STP CorporationMarch 701Ford Cosworth DFW 2.5 V8LEV
WIG
TER5th15
Lotus 70PUK
WAR
SAN
SUR
1975McCormack RacingTalon MR1Chevrolet 5.0 V8LEV
PUK
WIG
TER
WAR
SUR
AIR
SAN
5th17

Complete British Saloon Car Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap.)

YearTeamCarClass1234567891011PtsClass
1963Sunbeam-Talbot LtdSunbeam Rapier Series IIIASNEOULGOOAINSIL
?
CRYSILBRHBRHOULSILNC0NC
1973BMW MotorsportBMW 3.0 CSLBRHSILTHRTHRSILINGBRHSIL
DNS
BRHNC0NC

Complete 24 Hours of Le Mans results

YearTeamCo-driversCarClassLaps
1964 Briggs S. Cunningham Jochen NeerpaschGT +3.0131DSQDSQ
1965 Shelby-American Inc. Phil HillFord GT40 Mk.IIP +5.089DNFDNF
1966 Shelby-American Inc. Bruce McLarenFord GT40 Mk.IIP +5.03601st1st
1967 SpA Ferrari SEFAC Nino VaccarellaFerrari 330 P3 SpyderP +5.0105DNFDNF
1969 SpA Ferrari SEFAC Peter SchettyFerrari 312P CoupeP 3.00DNFDNF
1971 Equipe Matra-Simca Jean-Pierre BeltoiseMatra-Simca MS660P 3.0DNFDNF
1972 Equipe Matra-Simca Shell Jean-Pierre BeltoiseMatra-Simca MS670S 3.01DNFDNF
1973 BMW Motorsport Hans-Joachim StuckBMW 3.0CSLT 5.0160DNFDNF

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Mauro Forghieri, Ferrari F1 e non-solo. Automoto. 3 May 2013.
  2. Web site: NZ Formula One driver Chris Amon dead at 73. Associated Press. 3 August 2016 . 2016-08-03.
  3. Web site: Drivers: Chris Amon. grandprix.com. 6 November 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20110126101652/http://grandprix.com/gpe/drv-amochr.html. 26 January 2011.
  4. Prankard; Paragraph 1
  5. Web site: All work no playboy. 2014-10-09. 2016-08-03.
  6. News: Chris Amon Takes Formula Two Race. The Montreal Gazette. 19 July 1965. 24.
  7. News: New Zealanders Win Wild-Finish LeMans. The Spokesman-Review. 20 June 1966. 7.
  8. News: Ferraris Roar To 1–2–3 Sweep. The St. Petersburg Times. 6 February 1967.
  9. Web site: Roebuck. Nigel. Nigel Roebuck. Legends. Motor Sport magazine archive. October 1998. 18. 9 August 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160809222259/http://www.motorsportmagazine.com/archive/article/october-1998/18/legends. 9 August 2016.
  10. E. Young. Forza Amon. Harper Collins NZ, Auckland (2003) p209-10
  11. E. Young. Forza Amon (2003) p205-10 & M. Hughes. Remembering Chris Among,Motorsport 3-8-2016
  12. News: Amon continues Circuit mastery. The Montreal Gazette. 21 September 1968. 27.
  13. News: Chris Amon N.Z. Prix. The Spokesman-Review. 3 February 1969. 12.
  14. E. Young. Forza Amon. Harper (2003) p225-7 & M. Hughes. "Remembering Chris Amon". Motor Sport 3-8-2016.
  15. Web site: Taylor. Simon. Simon Taylor (journalist). Lunch with... Chris Amon. Motor Sport magazine archive. June 2008. 62. 27 August 2016.
  16. News: Rindt wins French Grand Prix, tops world standing. The Montreal Gazette. 5 June 1970. 15.
  17. T. Simon. A Chequered Year (1971)
  18. Book: Klopfer, Wolfgang . Formula 5000 in New Zealand & Australia: Race by Race . Books on Demand GmbH . 2005 . 3833431016 . 42–53 .
  19. E. Young. Forza Amon. A biography of Chris Amon. Harper Collins (2003) Auckland, p. 164-6.
  20. Young. Forza Amon, p169
  21. M. Clark. Chris Amon. A Celebration of Kiwi Icon. Celebrity Publishing-McLaren Trust, p74
  22. E. Young. Forza Amon. Harper Collins. Auckland (2003)p170
  23. E Young. Forza Amon. Harper Collins, pp 171–175
  24. Book: Klopher, Wolfgang. Formula 5000 in New Zealand & Australia: Race by Race. 2005. Books on Demand GmbH. 148–156. 3833431016.
  25. Web site: Motorsport: On the Hot Seat – Chris Amon . . 1 June 2016 . 28 June 2016.
  26. Web site: Australian Wins NZ's Biggest Rally – Motorsport News for New Zealand. Designs. Thomas Nicholson. www.nzmotorsport.co.nz. 2016-08-03. 28 August 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160828010415/http://www.nzmotorsport.co.nz/content/newsarticle.cfm?id=952. dead.
  27. Web site: Chris Amon, 1943–2016. 2016-08-03.
  28. News: Amon shows advantages of an EnergyWise old head. The New Zealand Herald. 13 November 2004. 28 November 2012.
  29. Web site: Chris Amon to be honoured at NZ festival. crash.net. 6 January 2011. 30 October 2012. 29 November 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20121129080404/http://www.crash.net/f1/news/165754/1/chris_amon_to_be_honoured_at_nz_festival.html. dead.
  30. Web site: Festival to pay tribute to Kiwi hero. Pitpass. 6 November 2012. 29 November 2012.
  31. News: Motor racing legend Chris Amon dies . The New Zealand Herald . 3 August 2016 . 3 August 2016.
  32. http://notices.nzherald.co.nz/obituaries/nzherald-nz/obituary.aspx?pid=180961021 death notices, New Zealand Herald, 6 August 2016
  33. Web site: New fitness coach for Stags. Stuff. 27 July 2009. 2017-10-29.
  34. Web site: James Amon. High Performance Sport New Zealand. en. 2017-10-29. https://web.archive.org/web/20171029065748/https://www.hpsnz.org.nz/support-directory/james-amon. 29 October 2017. dead.
  35. Web site: Brendon Hartley on upcoming F1 debut: 'I feel ready'. Stuff. 14 October 2017. 2017-10-29.
  36. Web site: Andrea de Cesaris drove ten different types of car in F1. Is this a record?. Ask Steven – ESPNF1.com. 23 June 2012.
  37. Web site: Moggipaldi. Graham. Chris Amon: The Unlucky Star. Badger GP. 20 July 2011. 29 November 2012. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20130417042726/http://badgergp.com/2011/07/chris-amon-the-unlucky-star/. 17 April 2013.
  38. Web site: DRIVERS: JIM CLARK. Grandprix.com. 29 November 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20110203151243/http://grandprix.com/gpe/drv-clajim.html. 3 February 2011.
  39. Web site: Jimmy Clark. ddavid.com. 29 November 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20110605095229/http://www.ddavid.com/formula1/clark.htm. 5 June 2011.