(Redirected from A.J. Watson)'A. J. Watson' (born
May 8 1924) was a car builder and chief mechanic from
1949 through
1984 in the
Indianapolis 500, winning the race seven times, which leaves him tied for the record for most wins by a builder.
A native of southern
California, Watson came to Indianapolis in
1948 but missed the race. He returned the following year with a home-built car that failed to qualify. For the next 11 years, his cars not only qualified but were leaders in many years. From
1955 to
1958 he was associated with the
John Zink team, and from
1959 on with
Bob Wilkes. His cars dominated the race through
1964. Although he continued entering cars for another two decades, he was never able to regain the commanding position of his heyday.
In
1964, with many teams following Lotus's example and moving to rear engined "funny cars", Watson built a pair of cars based on Rolla Vollstedt's successful car. These worked reasonably well but could not reproduce the success he had with his front-engined "roadsters". He built monocoque rear-engined cars in
1966 and
1967 with ever-decreasing success.
From
1969 until
1977, Watson ran
Eagles and then built a small series of highly derivative new 'Watson' cars in
1977,
1978 and again in
1982 based on Lightning and
March designs before retiring. He is frequently listed on the Indy 500 entry sheet as the "race strategist" for
PDM Racing, though his role with the team is largely honorary.
Career awards
★ He was inducted in the
National Sprint Car Hall of Fame in 1993.
★ He was inducted in the
Motorsports Hall of Fame of America in 1996.
External links
★
Legendary Mechanic Celebrating 50th Year at Indy