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At home in Watkins Glen 1978. Already crowned
World Champion, he was the center of attention before over 100,000 fans,
having won the pole by over 1 second.
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Trenton
April 30, 1977. The signature Andretti profile. Mario
signed this photograph, and the adjacent one, for me the following
year at Watkins Glen.
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Trenton
April 30, 1977. Mario discusses car setup. Mario drove
only a handful of Indy Car races between 1976 and 1982, while he drove
in F-1
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Indy Pole 1966 w/Clint Brawner, Al Dean & Jim McGee. Some say Juan Montoya is
great, having won the CART championship in his rookie year. In
this 1966 photo, Mario's car wears #1, signifying he was the 1965
champion, a feat he too accomplished in his rookie year. In fact
Mario went on to repeat as champion in 1966, lost by a few points in
1967 and 1968, and then won the championship again in 1969. If
he had not lost by those slim margins in 67 and 68, he would have won
the championship 5 straight years.
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Victory
Lane 1967 Daytona 500. Mario outran NASCAR Goldenboy and Holman
and Moody Ford teammate, Freddie Lorenzen, to become the first
non-NASCAR driver to win the Daytona 500. Running the car loose
all day, he ran the race's fastest laps
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How
good was he? Mario takes pole in his very 1st F-1 race, Watkins
Glen, NY 1968. In the race he dropped out with a broken clutch,
but not before standing the F-1 establishment on it's ear
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Mario & Bobby Unser
discuss his radical 'dihedral (v wings)' Vel's Parnelli car at Trenton in April
1972
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Trenton
April 1973. Mario steps out of his #11 Viceroy machine.
Mario was part of the the 'Super Team' of Andretti, Al Unser, and Joe
Leonard.
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Trenton
April 1973. The Vel-Parnelli chassis was no match for Dan
Gurney's Eagles back then and 1973 was a lackluster year for Mario.
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Trenton
1974. A cold gray day in central New Jersey. Mario had a
lot of success at Trenton, winning on both the 1-mile oval and then again
when it was lengthened to 1.5-miles, nine times in total. He won the
first race at Trenton when it was lengthened to 1.5 miles in 1969, and won
the last race ever run at Trenton driving for Roger Penske in 1979.
For me, Trenton is where I caught the auto racing bug in 1965.
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STP sponsored Mario in 1969 and 1970.
Top - Mario piloted the STP Brawner-Hawk to a win at Indy in 69. Below,
in the
Colin Chapman designed Lotus he dominated with throughout practice.
However, two days before qualifying was to begin the car broke a right rear
wheel hub sending Mario hard into the wall and to the hospital with burns on
his face. The team brought out the backup Brawner-Hawk and the rest is
history.
Headlines from
Competition Press & Autoweek. Photos by M. Cipolloni
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Top, 1971 driving the Ferrari
312 B2, the same car that carried him to his first F-1 win earlier in
the year in South
Africa on March 6, 1971 (Bottom). Three weeks later it also carried him to two wins in the non-points paying Questor GP at the
former Ontario Motor Speedway.
Headlines from
Competition Press & Autoweek. Photo by M. Cipolloni
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Mario's win in the 3/28/71 Questor GP at
Ontario Motor Speedway was very popular. Competition Press &
Autoweek ran this headlines. Three weeks later it also carried him to two wins in the non-points paying Questor GP at the
former Ontario Motor Speedway where he beat Jackie Stewart in both heats.
In the first heat Mario passed Stewart on the final lap to take the
win. In the second heat, Stewart got the jump on Mario at the start
and led the first 7 or 8 laps. Mario then passed and pulled away for a
dominating win.
That race was dubbed the war of the worlds, pitting Americans in F-5000
machines against the F-1 cars and stars. As expected the F-1 cars
dominated that day, but the American fans had something to celebrate,
Mario was American.
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After driving F-1 occasionally for Lotus in the late 60's and occasionally
for Ferrari in the early 70's, Mario raced the following years in the
USA honing his road racing skills in F-5000. Mario was always the fastest driver on the
F-5000 circuit in this Viceroy Chevrolet powered Lola, completely
dominating qualifying and every race for two years. However, Brian
Redman, driving for the Carl Haas team won the championship both years Mario
drove in F-5000 by consistently finishing races. Mario's car often
broke. He has
stated that those years helped prep him for his
onslaught on the F-1 world title in 1974
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Colin Chapman, the mastermind behind the Lotus empire for which
Mario won 11 of his 12 F-1 wins, shown here signing autographs at Watkins Glen in
1979. When the Vels-Parnelli F-1 team fell apart after an
unsuccessful 1975 season, Mario found himself without a F-1 ride
again. It just so happened that Colin Chapman needed a driver and
in 1976 they were reunited. Mario won the last race of 76 in a
downpour in Japan. In 1977 Chapman and Andretti won the most races
and the most poles, but Mario finished 3rd in the World Championship due
to a multitude of engine failures. In 1978 they repeated that
domination with the Lotus 79 and won the world championship.
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Winning
in Argentina in early 1978. His 1st step toward the F-1 title.
In that race he used the same car that carried him to four wins in
1977, the Lotus 78, the first real ground-effects car. Although
he won more races than anyone else in 1977, and more pole positions
(sometimes by as much as 1.5 sec), he finished third in the
championship. Colin Chapman believed in pushing the envelope,
and the Lotus team was the beneficiary of the development Ford
Cosworth that year. Unfortunately for Mario and the team, it
blew up regularly.
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Above, in the successful Lotus 78 on
the Andretti Straight at
Mosport, Canada, October 1977. Center, in the
first race in the Lotus 79, Mario wins wire-to-wire in the '78 Belgium
GP. Below, defending
F-1 champion, James Hunt gets the jump on Mario in the '78 Spanish
GP. Not for long though as Mario passed him on lap 5 and
disappeared into the distance to claim his 2nd win of 1978, winning
easily over his teammate Ronnie Peterson.
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Above, Mario and his teammate, the late Ronnie
Peterson. Mario and Ronnie developed a close relationship in
1978. Below, Mario
gets airborne over the curbs en-route to victory in Jarama, Spain 1978.
Andretti and Peterson would finish 1-2 in five races that year,
Belgium, Spain, France, Germany and Holland. Andretti was able
to out qualify Peterson in all but a couple of races that year, but on
race day, Peterson usually gave Andretti a run for his money. In
the end Andretti won six races that year and with it the F-1 crown.
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Enjoying the fruits of victory in the 78
French GP. After starting 2nd, he took the lead on the first lap
and led flag-to-flag with teammate Ronnie Peterson in 2nd.
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Gilles
Villeneuve gets the jump on Mario at the Italian GP, the race where
Mario would clinch the title and his teammate, Ronnie Peterson, would
lose his life.
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The
beautiful Lotus 79 which took Mario to the World Championship in 1978,
only the 2nd American to ever do so.
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Watkins Glen 1976. Mario's Lotus in the paddock.
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Watkins Glen 1976, Mario heads for turn 8.
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Mosport 1977. Blasting up the Andretti Straight
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Mosport 1977. Up over the brow of the hill leading onto the long
Andretti Straight. Andretti and James Hunt had a stirring battle
the entire race, Mario leading Hunt by no more than 1 second.
Towards the end James Hunt and his McLaren teammate crashed out of the
race leaving Mario to cruise home to the victory. However, with
a lap on the field and just taking it easy, his motor blew several laps from
the end.
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Above, leading the field at the start in
Kyalami, South Africa 1978 in the Lotus 78. The team did not
switch to the Lotus 79 until the Belgian GP that year. His
teammate, Ronnie Peterson won when Mario ran out of fuel two laps from
the end.
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Billboards like this one were prominent at the Glen in 78

Even the fans got into the act.
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Watkins Glen 1978, braking hard for turn 7.
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Watkins Glen 1978. The World Champion accelerates hard out of
turn 11 in his Lotus 79.
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Montreal 1978. Already crowned World Champion
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Above, 1979 at Monaco in the unsuccessful
Lotus 80. The longer wheelbase car did not perform as well as the Lotus 78 and 79.
Mario tried to defend his F-1 title in the dark green Martini and
Rossi Lotus 80 but it was so unsuccessful the team switched back to
the year old Lotus 79 half way through the 79 season. Gone were the traditional black with gold
pinstripes of longtime Lotus sponsor Players cigarettes.
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Both
photos were taken at Watkins Glen in October of that year in turn 7 of
the 'boot' section of the track, a section not currently used by NASCAR.
For a map of the circuit, click
here.
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Above, Watkins Glen 1979, Mario leads a group of cars. Note the
bright autumn colors which would greet the F-1 establishment each
October in upstate New York. The bottom photo was taken in Montreal Canada
that same year
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In the Essex sponsored Lotus 81 at the
Argentina GP in 1980
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Talking with Jim McGee in Trenton
April 30, 1977. Along with Clint Brawner, the trio enjoyed much
success together in the 1960's. Jim has served as crew chief for
many drivers over the years, and currently works as Team Manager for
the Patrick Racing CART team.
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Ready to race the CAM2 sponsored
Penske in Trenton April 30, 1977

Diving into turn 1 at Trenton.
Even though Mario drove F-1 full-time in 1977, he still found time to
run a few Indy car races for Roger Penske.
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In 1981, F-1 refused to race at Watkins Glen for safety reasons and
moved the race to Las Vegas. CART took over and here Mario is
shown getting into his Pat Patrick Wildcat on a wet day in October.
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Although he was still driving
fulltime in F-1, Mario ran a number of races for Pat Patrick in the
early 80's teamed with Gordon Johncock. Here at Watkins Glen he
is shown jumping over the wall after exiting his car.
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Practice and qualifying at The
Glen in 81 were wet and cold, and Mario, with his extensive F-1 road
racing experience was on pole. On race day he led effortlessly
until the transmission failed.
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At Riverside, CA in 1979, on his way to a win and the IROC
crown. More than any other driver, Mario demonstrated that he
could win in any type of race car, even 'stock' cars which were not
his forte.
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Mario returned to Indy Cars
full time in 1983 driving a new Lola for team owners Paul Newman and
Carl Haas. He managed to win two races that year in a car
that still needed development.
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After winning the CART
championship easily in 1984 (his 4th such title), his car adorned the
#1 in 1985. Here he is shown slipping into his Lola at Pocono.
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The signature Andretti silver
and red helmet design is known the world over. In honor of their
father, his sons Michael and Jeff always race with the same helmet
design, proudly displaying the American flag in the back.
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Another photo from the 1985
Pocono 500. Mario only won once at his hometown track, the next year
(1986). He and Michael get away from the racing
rat race in their nearby Pocono resort.

Photo courtesy Newman Haas
Racing
Will he race at LeMans again in 2001?
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Signing autographs after being
inducted into the Italian-American Hall of Fame in 1976 in Atlantic
City, New Jersey. Although Mario cherishes his Italian heritage,
he always considered himself an American first and foremost.

Watkins Glen 79 - Mario for Pope
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Mid-Ohio 1984. On his way to a dominating flag-to-flag win and
another 22 points toward the CART crown.
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Mid-Ohio in 1986. Photo
taken from pit box roof.
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In the carousel at Mid-Ohio in
1986. Note the size of the rear wing end plates back then.
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In the hairpin at Long Beach April,
1987. Mario led every lap that day. He was so dominate he
won the pole by almost 2 seconds and lapped the entire field once and
was a few seconds shy of lapping the entire field twice. It was
the first win for the Ilmor Chevrolet engine that was to dominate CART
for several years.
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Long Beach 1987 sitting on the pit wall that same year after
practice talking to then Lola engineer Adrian Newey. The same Adrian
Newey who later went on to design the dominate Williams F-1 cars that
won many world championships and is now doing the same for the McLaren
F-1 team.
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With wife Dee Ann at Long Beach in 1988. Dee Ann was often seen
in victory lane in Mario's early days as a race driver. However,
later she always avoided
the limelight and was seldom seen at the track, preferring instead to
stay home and raise sons Michael and Jeff, and daughter Barbara on
Victory Lane in Nazareth, Pennsylvania.
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At Pocono in 1983. Mario always
tried to find time to chat with friends and fans especially at Pocono
(and later at Nazareth) his home track.
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Talking with Ron Hemelgarn at
Long Beach in 1988, years before the CART/IRL split. Ron now
owns an IRL team while Mario remains firmly planted in the CART camp.
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1988 at Cleveland. Mario
would go on to out duel Bobby Rahal that day in probably one of his
greatest and most satisfying drives, that at the ripe age of 48.
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Mario and his twin brother Aldo at Nazareth 1999. Both follow
their sons careers closely, Mario of Michael in CART and Aldo of John
in NASCAR
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Above photo at Long Beach 1999, one below from Michigan 1999.
Michael and Mario still discuss race setups to this day. Mario
told us an Andretti CART team will happen eventually. Hopefully
sooner rather than later.
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Composite from Mario's last race in Laguna Seca. The culmination
of a career that started as a little boy in a displaced persons camp
after World War II and grew to become perhaps the greatest driver this
world has ever known.
Photo courtesy
Steve Giberson
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