Posted 29 August 2001 - 18:31
FROM RICHIE JENKINS:
Ken Tyrrell Obituary
2001 gets off to the worst possible start with the death of one of Formula One's most enduring & liked figures. Although he & John Cooper worked together, it was only as Cooper, who died on Christmas Eve, bowed out of front-line Formula 1, that Ken eased in.
Like Cooper, Tyrrell was a racing driver early in his life, but that wasn't how he started. Born on the 3rd May 1924, his first love was football (he remained a staunch Tottenham Hotspur supporter all his life) but it was a trip to Silverstone that sparked a desire to race. He first raced at Snetterton in 1952 & became a leading contender in 500cc F3 racing, but he soon realised that he would never make it as a driver & decided he would gain more pleasure & satisfaction from helping others by running cars.
This was just one of many sensible, thought out & pragmatic ideas that Ken had either in motor racing or in life, but it wasn't the first. After serving in the RAF in World War Two, Ken had the foresight to see that people would need wood as post war Britain recovered. He became a timber merchant & soon made his first million.
By the time he ended his day-to-day association with Formula 1 at the end of the 1997 season, his cars had drifted to the back of the grid & so it was easy, certainly to someone of my generation, to forget the incredible success & influence Ken had at his peak.
How or what will we remember him for, now that he's gone? Is it for discovering or neutering & then fine tuning Jackie Stewart's development into a world championship winning driver & F1 legend? Maybe for the one of the things than exemplified Ken, his robustness & no-nonsense, which occurred at the 1975 Spanish GP at Monjuich Park, where, quite rightly as it turned out, concerned with the Armco barriers, got out his spanner & proceeded to try & fix them himself & also at the 1989 Monaco GP, where he celebrated his 65th birthday by driving the team's trucks from Ockham to Monaco as there were not enough staff available?
Maybe in one of his different guises, a incredibly successful F2 entrant with Matra & JYS, which preceded his own chassis, or as BRDC President, replacing Lord Hesketh in 1999 & bowing down to Jackie Stewart earlier in 2000. Maybe as the winning entrant in the 1964 European Touring Car Championship or head of the Cooper F1 team in 1965, taking over the firm for who he drove for in the 50's, after John Cooper's road accident?
For his effective domination of Formula 1 between 1969 & 1973, whether with the March, Matra or his own chassis, Stewart winning 3 titles & dominating in 1971 & 1973?
For his choice of drivers, either spotting them, or giving them the grooming, care, loyalty & support which either saw them succeed or have arguably the best spell of their Formula 1 careers;- not only did he make sure Jody Scheckter turned into a fine driver, he also probably kept him alive at the same time - others who had high points in his cars would have to be; Cevert, Depailler, Peterson, Pironi, Cheever, Alboreto, Bellof, Brundle, Capelli, Streiff, Palmer, Alesi, Modena, Katayma & Mika Salo, amongst others & the memories that these drivers invoked in his cars?
For his sharpness & risks as a team owner, like for instance, the rejection of turbo-aspirated cars, which brought him the 1987 Colin Chapman trophy & Jonathan Palmer, the Jim Clark Cup for 'normally'-aspirited cars before the rest followed suit or the Tyrrell 6 wheeler, not only unusual but successful - an extreme rarity in Formula 1. In 1976-77 the P34 took 3rd place in the 1976 constructor's championship & the famous win in Sweden. Ken laughed at his critics, especially when Scheckter & Depailler both praised the turn-in ability of the cars.
Or maybe the bad times?
The death of Cevert & immediate retirement of Stewart which led to Tyrrell short of two leading lights & thus never reached the same heights again. The 1984 fiasco where Tyrrell were thrown out of the series mid-season for an alleged infringement; Bellof & Brundles' hard work forever deleted from the record books? Or the decline, bit by bit, from 1983, when Michele Alboreto became the last man to win in a Tyrrell (US GP) to '97, forced to employ the likes of Grouillard, before handing over to the late Harvey Poslethwaite for 1998 & then subsequently to the faceless, cold & charmless BAR equipe, Ken finally tiring of trying to find the right budget, drivers & engine.
One hopes not. How I'll remember him chiefly is as a warm, extremely sharp (arguably one of THE sharpest team bosses) & above all witty gentleman who didn't care what the establishment thought, until of course, he WAS the establishment! Asked a few years back who my favourite team was, I said that I didn't really care for teams, but I guess it was Tyrrell.
One last story, for me, sums Ken up & all I've said;
"After watching the Dutch GP with the new DFV engine, with which Clark dominated the race, Tyrrell immediately lay down a deposit with Walter Hayes (who also died over the Christmas/New Year period) to buy them for his own forthcoming Formula 1 team for 1968, even though the units were not available for sale at that time!
His comment for doing so; "Well, everything else was rubbish!"
A good man, who after suffering for the last half of the year with stomach cancer, a cruel illness, can now rest his soul in eternal peace.
Ken Tyrrell 1924-2001
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thanks to Barry Boor, who gave me the preparation for this obituary.