
Daft names in motorsport
#1
Posted 27 August 2001 - 18:35
And
Jarno Trulli, named after Jarno Saarinen, a bike racer in the 70s.
Do we have more unusual names or names with a "story" behind?
For obvious reason, my favourite name is Swede Savage:p
Stefan
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#2
Posted 28 August 2001 - 13:06



And if there wasn't, there should have been!
Vanwall.
#3
Posted 28 August 2001 - 13:12
Bert
#4
Posted 28 August 2001 - 13:45

Stefan
#5
Posted 28 August 2001 - 15:32
#6
Posted 28 August 2001 - 20:50
One-time Indy 500 driver Racin Gardner (glad I didn't hear anything about him anymore)
USAC/CART driver Salt Walther
#7
Posted 28 August 2001 - 21:11


#8
Posted 28 August 2001 - 22:21
No particular reason, but his name made me laugh ;) I always pictured him making F1 one day ...

#9
Posted 29 August 2001 - 05:46

#10
Posted 29 August 2001 - 06:17
Another that leaps out of my soggy memory (was he a racing driver or a speedway rider) is Bernt Persson. I wasn't sure if he spent too much time sunbaking, or whether he'd had a serious crash and burn.
While it's getting slightly off the original topic (I think) you have to wonder about parents who call their sons Dick Seaman or, even worse, Dick Trickle (NASCAR).
And there's another similar NASCAR name that I just can't bring to mind at the moment.
#11
Posted 29 August 2001 - 10:00



Vanwall.
#12
Posted 29 August 2001 - 14:00
Originally posted by Pikachu Racing
NASCAR driver Lake Speed......I wonder how did he ended up with that name.
One-time Indy 500 driver Racin Gardner (glad I didn't hear anything about him anymore) USAC/CART driver Salt Walther
Racin's father raced (he ran one of the Daytona 125 qualifiers and Talladega in '73...car destroyed in the massive 26 car pile-up there)...his name, Slick Gardner.
It gets better, the pale green Mercury was sponsored by a restaurant alongside Highway 101 (a main route between San Francisco and Los Angeles)...Pea Soup Andersen's! (the Andersens were big racing backers. There were photos all over the wall, one of Slick in the pale green Merc on the banks!).
There have been others, and just like the racing family members thread, more than I can name here...but, in the early 1950's there was a NASCAR driver named:
Dick Passwater.
Jim Thurman
#13
Posted 30 August 2001 - 05:51
Another NASCAR driver with an odd name is Mr. and Mrs Stricklin's son. What on earth posessed them to name him after a garden shed?
Billy Boat and Lake Speed are amusing too.
But then, who am I to talk..............?
#14
Posted 30 August 2001 - 06:14
#15
Posted 30 August 2001 - 09:47
Gid Goins
Many thought it was an alias, but...a look in the phone book revealed a Gideon P Goins!!!.
Jim Thurman
#16
Posted 30 August 2001 - 16:00
#17
Posted 30 August 2001 - 16:35

Jigger Sirois is also a pretty unusual name. It's always strange for me as a francophone to hear that name pronounced in English (to me it's "Sea-Rwah" and not "Suh-Royce")...
#18
Posted 31 August 2001 - 00:25
#19
Posted 31 August 2001 - 00:45
Also unbelievable but true was Enzo Finocchio. Finocchio is used in some parts of Italy for homosexual.
Oh, they were not drivers, but still lots of fun !
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#20
Posted 31 August 2001 - 07:39
Of course, Ben stands for 'Bernardus' in this instance, which (IMHO) is an unusual name in its own right...I have always had a soft spot for the name BEN PON.
Bernardus Pon

#21
Posted 31 August 2001 - 12:22
NASCAR driver Lake Speed......I wonder how did he ended up with that name.
I'll find out maybe, I know the guy's team manager from when he was the only ever US World Kart Champion.
I always think Jenson Button is a bit weird (the name!!), he's named after the Jensen Interceptor but his dad wanted to use a more English spelling. John Button chose Jenson's name intending that he would be a racing driver all along
#22
Posted 31 August 2001 - 12:47

#23
Posted 31 August 2001 - 14:12
#24
Posted 31 August 2001 - 14:17
The father's name was Lake Shore, born 1899. He was nick-named "Smiling Jack".
Wouldn't have thought he needed a nick name...
#25
Posted 31 August 2001 - 14:20
#26
Posted 31 August 2001 - 14:24
Dutch Porsche racer of the 70's, Toon Suykerbuyk (=Tony Sugarbelly), is my personal favourite.
#27
Posted 31 August 2001 - 16:54
I really don't know why, but I can't say "Memo Glidey" without laughing. Likewise "Sito Pons"
And the name with the best sound, by far, is Luca Cadalora
#28
Posted 31 August 2001 - 18:23
And I have found this man driving in the Targa Florio: Libero Pesce. I do not speak Italian but does'nt this mean "Free Fish" ?
Stefan
#29
Posted 31 August 2001 - 18:28
Don Radbruch
#30
Posted 31 August 2001 - 20:10
Another funny one was Ed Pimm, sounds like a too tiny kinky name for a racer !
A real good one for french guys is the one of 30s driver John Duff. Doesn't sound that funny in english, but in french it sounds exactly like the yellow part of an egg.
#31
Posted 31 August 2001 - 20:19
#32
Posted 31 August 2001 - 21:47
And the new Honda Fitta will never ever be for sale in Sweden. No way. Absolutely not.
Stefan
#33
Posted 31 August 2001 - 22:12
Originally posted by Stefan Ornerdal
Swedish girls always blush when they hear "Fittipaldi".
And the new Honda Fitta will never ever be for sale in Sweden. No way. Absolutely not.
Stefan
Stefan: this is the second time in a week you've mentioned this without giving details!
Please explain ...


#34
Posted 01 September 2001 - 02:06
Speaking of Swedish names, what about Tina Thorner (sorry, there should be an accent over the 'o' on Thorner).
Tina must have been co-driving in rallies for almost 20 years now. I first met her when she was with Susanne Kottulinsky (daughter of F3 driver Freddy) in the early 1980s, I think it was.
When I asked her name, she told me "Tina Turner". I didn't believe her at first, but that is how her name is pronounced.
#35
Posted 01 September 2001 - 02:10
Originally posted by Don Radbruch
I'm told that I have an ususual name for a racer but this would be in German. Does radbruch really mean "broken wheel".
Don Radbruch
Don
Better to retire "wheel broken" than to retire "piston broke"!
(I wonder if that needs explaining to non-English speaking posters?)
Oh, all right!
piston broke
pist'n broke
pissed 'n' broke
pissed and broke
drunk and with no money...
#36
Posted 01 September 2001 - 08:09
BUT, I know why Honda won't market their new car under the name "Fitta" in Sweden and Norway. (Moderator, throw this post out if you think the following is too rude......).
Translated to English it would simply mean Honda .........."****".......


#37
Posted 01 September 2001 - 09:42
I'm afraid yes, Don! :chuckle:Originally posted by Don Radbruch
I'm told that I have an ususual name for a racer but this would be in German. Does radbruch really mean "broken wheel".
Don Radbruch
#38
Posted 02 September 2001 - 23:23
Originally posted by Stefan Ornerdal
For obvious reason, my favourite name is Swede Savage:p
Stefan
http://swedesavage42.tripod.com/



#39
Posted 03 September 2001 - 00:05
Translated to English it would simply mean Honda .........."****"..
Well and if 'paldi' means "shaved," then you might know why those girls were giggling.

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#40
Posted 03 September 2001 - 13:11
The Honda F***a (C**t), what about this in advertising:
"Nothing is better to glide in"
"The only one which get bigger when older"
"For a man"
"With directly induction"
"Better when wet"
"Feels thight, but there is room for more than you think"
"Every mans dream"
"It's hairy"
"It's the inside that counts"
etc etc
but the C**t is leaking every 28th day!

Stefan
#41
Posted 03 September 2001 - 14:52
Karl Kling - it sounds like a broken car.
Ligier - in Croatian it sounds just like an order: "Lick her!"
Ricardo Londono-Bridge (!!!) - is he falling down?
Mika Salo - "salo" is Croatian word for pig's fat!
#42
Posted 03 September 2001 - 17:24
Originally posted by Stefan Ornerdal
Vitesse2, thanks for the link. I wonder why he was called Swede? Isn't it a sort of a cabbage in english?
Stefan
He was probably called Swede purely because he was blond and looked vaguely like a Viking: simple folk these Americans!
[Vitesse2 ducks hail of invective directed across the Atlantic ...]
And a swede is a root vegetable like a turnip: when the England football team lost to Sweden a few years back in some important game or another (couldn't care less what it was!

SWEDES 2 TURNIPS 0
#43
Posted 03 September 2001 - 17:38
Time to get out of this (vegetable) soup, way off topic!
Stefan
#44
Posted 03 September 2001 - 19:57


Chris
#45
Posted 03 September 2001 - 20:42
#46
Posted 03 September 2001 - 20:48
Originally posted by Chris Bloom
Going even further off topic. A few years back there was an article in the local paper about strange names parents inflict on their kids. One which sticks in my mind was Mr & Mrs Kock naming their daughter Iona:lol:![]()
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Chris
Cruel, I call that!! Although I used to drink in the same pub as a chap (now long dead from cirrhosis!) whose father had named him Bernard Arthur Leonard Stanley Albert Wood ....


#47
Posted 03 September 2001 - 20:53
#48
Posted 03 September 2001 - 21:17

About Salo: same in french, Salo meens b*stard. This led to numerous (bad) play on words by french journalists...
Stefan, is Eje Elgh the complete name of this great F3, F2 & Endurance driver of the 80s or is it shorten ?
Little trivia : Norberto Fontana raced in a series (CART) where a track as the same name as him. Can you see other drivers in that case ?
#49
Posted 03 September 2001 - 22:13
Stefan, is Eje Elgh the complete name of this great F3, F2 & Endurance driver of the 80s or is it shorten ?
It's his complete name. Elgh is pronounced as "Älg" which is swedish for Moose! Eje does the "expert" commentary in Swedish TV.
Little trivia : Norberto Fontana raced in a series (CART) where a track as the same name as him. Can you see other drivers in that case ?
I am not a racing driver but as a speedway fan I have visited the Ornerdal speedway track in Denmark:D
Anyone here with the name Avus


Stefan
#50
Posted 04 September 2001 - 05:30