Garrie Cooper Explained

Garrie Cooper
Nationality: Australian
Birth Date:22 December 1935
Birth Place:Glenelg, South Australia
Death Place:Adelaide, South Australia
Retired:1980
Last Series:Australian Drivers' Championship
Years Active:1962-80
Teams:Elfin Sports Cars/Ansett Team Elfin
Best Finish:3rd
Year:1973 Australian Drivers' Championship
Prev Series:Australian 1½ Litre Championship
Tasman Series
Australian Formula 2 Ch.
Australian Sports Car Championship
Prev Series Years:1966-68

1969-75
1971
1974-75
Titles:Singapore Grand Prix
Australian 1½ Litre Championship
Australian Sports Car Championship
Title Years:1968
1968

1975

Garrie Clifford Cooper (22 December 1935[1] - 25 April 1982) was the founder of the highly successful Elfin Sports Cars and a competitive racing driver in his own right, winning the 1968 Singapore Grand Prix, the 1968 Australian 1½ Litre Championship, and the 1975 Australian Sports Car Championship - all in Elfin cars of his own design.

Elfin Sports Cars

Cooper established Elfin Sports Cars in 1959[2] with the help of his father Cliff Cooper. The first Elfin, the Streamliner, was a front-engined sports car.[3] The prototype was completed in October 1959 and was followed by 22 production versions, the last of which was delivered in 1963.[3]

248 Elfins of various models had been completed by 1983.[4]

Racing career

During the 1978 Australian Grand Prix at the fast Sandown Raceway in Melbourne, he suffered a broken leg in a high-speed crash while driving his own Elfin MR8 Formula 5000. The car was destroyed after leaving the track and crashing into the horse track rails on the back straight at over 2500NaN0. Cooper's explanation for the high speed crash was that something broke on the car which sent him spearing into the fence.

In 1980, Cooper designed and built the first open wheel car in Australia to use ground effect aerodynamics, the Elfin MR9 (the MR9 remains the only F5000 ever constructed using ground effect).[5] This car made its race début in Cooper's hands at the 1980 Australian Grand Prix at Melbourne's Calder Park Raceway. Originally to be driven by French Formula One driver Didier Pironi who had experience driving ground effects F1 cars, Cooper himself decided to drive the car as it had only been completed before practice and did not set a qualifying time. Pironi and Cooper's Ansett Team Elfin teammate John Bowe each drove an Elfin MR8 in the race, with Pironi finishing in third place, four laps down on the Williams FW07B Formula One car of World Champion Alan Jones.

John Bowe also drove the MR9 on limited occasions and felt that with the ground effects it had a lot of potential. However, Elfin were finding out what others had found with ground effect in that it required stronger suspension components to cope with the higher downforce generated in the corners compared to the conventional F5000's with Bowe reportedly receiving a fright during a race at Sandown in 1981 when the front suspension broke on the car. Unfortunately the true potential of the Chevrolet V8 powered MR9 was never reached and its racing life was limited to just one year as F5000 racing was phased out of Australian motorsport at the end of 1981.[6]

After limited appearances following the 1980 Australian Grand Prix, Cooper retired from racing following the 1981 season.

Health issues

Several years before, Cooper was admitted to hospital to have an artificial heart valve implanted. Due to the metallic material of the valve, Cooper had to take anti-coagulants, which caused concern from CAMS (the Confederation of Australian Motor Sport, Australia's motorsport ruling body), but after extensive lobbying from Cooper and countless letters supporting Cooper from his heart specialist, he was able to regain his racing license and continued his racing career.

Death

Early on Anzac Day (25 April) 1982, while working on a customer's car, Cooper died due to a ruptured aortic aneurysm.

Ansett Team Elfin drivers

Drivers who raced Elfin cars as teammate to Cooper include John McCormack, Vern Schuppan, John Bowe, Larry Perkins, Formula One World Champion James Hunt, and Didier Pironi.

Career results

SeasonSeriesPositionCarTeam
1962Australian Drivers' Championship18thElfin Formula Junior FordElfin Sports Cars
1964Australian Drivers' Championship8thElfin Mono Mk.1 FordElfin Sports Cars
1965Australian Drivers' Championship9thElfin Mono Mk.2B FordElfin Sports Cars
1966Australian Drivers' Championship8thElfin Mono Mk.2B FordElfin Sports Cars
1966Australian 1½ Litre Championship4thElfin Mono Mk.2B FordElfin Sports Cars
1967Australian Drivers' Championship12thElfin Mono Mk.2B FordElfin Sports Cars
1967Australian 1½ Litre Championship3rdElfin Mono Mk.2B FordElfin Sports Cars
1968Australian Drivers' Championship5thElfin 600B FordElfin Sports Cars
1968Australian 1½ Litre Championship1stElfin 600B FordElfin Sports Cars
1969Australian Drivers' Championship6thElfin 600C RepcoElfin Sports Cars
1970Australian Drivers' Championship4thElfin 600D RepcoElfin Sports Cars
1971Australian Drivers' Championship11thElfin 600D FordElfin Sports Cars
1971Australian Formula 2 Championship5thElfin 600D FordElfin Sports Cars
1972Australian Drivers' Championship9thElfin MR5 Repco HoldenAnsett Team Elfin
1973Tasman Series12thElfin MR5 Repco HoldenAnsett Team Elfin
1973Australian Drivers' Championship3rdElfin MR5 Repco HoldenAnsett Team Elfin
1974Tasman Series14thElfin MR5 Repco HoldenAnsett Team Elfin
1974Australian Drivers' Championship4thElfin MR5 Repco HoldenAnsett Team Elfin
1974Australian Sports Car Championship2ndElfin MS7 Repco HoldenAnsett Team Elfin
1975Tasman Series12thElfin MR5 Repco HoldenAnsett Team Elfin
1975Australian Drivers' Championship11thElfin MR5 Repco HoldenAnsett Team Elfin
1975Australian Sports Car Championship1stElfin MS7 Repco HoldenAnsett Team Elfin
1976Australian Drivers' Championship7thElfin MR8C ChevroletAnsett Team Elfin
1977Rothmans International Series6thElfin MR8C ChevroletAnsett Team Elfin
1977Australian Drivers' Championship7thElfin MR8C ChevroletAnsett Team Elfin
1978Australian Drivers' Championship8thElfin MR8C ChevroletAnsett Team Elfin
1980Australian Drivers' Championship20thElfin MR9 ChevroletAnsett Team Elfin

References

Notes and References

  1. http://adbonline.anu.edu.au/biogs/A170244b.htm Australian Dictionary of Biography
  2. South Australia - Certificate of Registration of a Business Name, Elfin Sports Cars, 19 October 1959
  3. John Blanden & Barry Catford, Australia's Elfin Sports and Racing Cars, Chapter Two, The Steamliner Sports Car, pages 5 to 13
  4. John Blanden & Barry Catford, Australia's Elfin Sports and Racing Cars, The Elfin Production Register, page x
  5. http://www.oldracingcars.com/f5000/elfin/ Old Racing Cars - Elfin
  6. http://forums.autosport.com/topic/133308-elfin-mr9/ Autosport - Elfin MR9