‘Driver flirted briefly with car racing in 1963 with a Lotus 20 Formula Junior car, but at that time he was still a top-notch motor cycle rider, having made his name on Nortons, and then AJS/Matchless, on which he finished third in the 1965 500 cc championship.’ - The Grand Prix Who’s Who, Steve Small
‘South African-born, Paddy came over with Jim Redman in 1958. Made a name on Nortons and had a brief spell with Suzuki before their machines were competitive. Switched to AJS/Matchless and finished third in the 500 cc championship in 1965. Retired to his Johannesburg home but continued to race on four wheels well into his 50s.’ - The Grand Prix Riders, Mick Woollett & Peter Clifford
The record books show that he was a regular in the top ten of the motorcycle Grand Prix world championships:
500cc
1960 - seventh with Norton (best result 4th x3)
1961 - tenth with Norton (best result 3rd)
1962 - seventh equal with Norton (best result 4th)
1964 - fifth with Matchless (best result 3rd x3)
1965 - third with Matchless (best result 2nd x2)
350cc
1960 - seventh equal with Norton (best result 5th x2)
1964 - seventh with AJS (best result 4th)
125cc
1962 - ninth equal with EMC (best result 3rd)
and also:
500cc
1959 - best result 6th x3
350cc
1959 - best result 5th x2
1965 - best result 6th
QUOTE (fil2.8 @ Sep 7 2009, 21:23)

the Mike Hailwood book I have is the 1968 issue by Mike and his journo friend Ted Macauley , simply called ---- you guessed it

'Hailwood ' . A good read up until that time , telling things as they were .
I have a couple of Hailwood books by Ted Macauley:
Mike: The life and times of Mike Hailwood (1984) is a pretty good book, but the one I really recommend is
Mike The Bike - Again: The Story of Mike Hailwood’s Return to the TT (1980)