Colin Steele McRae, MBE (5 August 1968
– 15 September 2007) was a Scottish rally driver born
in Lanark.
The son of five-time British Rally Champion
Jimmy McRae and brother of rally driver Alister McRae, Colin
McRae was the 1991 and 1992 British Rally Champion and,
in 1995, became the first Briton and the youngest to win
the World Rally Championship Drivers' title. McRae's outstanding
performance on the Subaru World Rally Team enabled the team
to win the World Rally Championship Constructors' title
three times in succession in 1995, 1996 and 1997. After
a four year spell with the Ford World Rallye Sport team,
which saw McRae win nine events, he moved to Citroën
World Rally Team in 2003 where, despite not winning an event,
he helped them win the first of their three consecutive
manufacturers' titles. He was appointed a Member of the
Order of the British Empire for services to motorsport in
1996. McRae died in a helicopter accident in September 2007
which also claimed the lives of his son and two family friends.
In November 2008 he was inducted into the Scottish Sports
Hall of Fame.
McRae was married to Alison, and had
two children, Hollie and Johnny. McRae moved to the principality
of Monaco in 1995, partly through his friendship with David
Coulthard. However, as his young family grew up, he spent
more time back at his home in Lanarkshire - accepting the
higher tax liability of living in Scotland. The couple bought
the 17th century Jerviswood House.
Colin McRae began his competitive career
in motorsport riding trial bikes at an early age, despite
being more interested in four wheeled machines rather than
two wheel bikes. At the age of sixteen, through the Coltness
Car Club, McRae discovered autotesting, he soon traded his
bike for a Mini Cooper and started competing. A year later,
he began to negotiate with another club member to use his
Hillman Avenger for the Kames[disambiguation needed] Stages,
a single–staged rally venue not far from McRae's home.
McRae finished the event fourteenth; first in his class
although he had run most of the event in a higher position.
In 1986, driving a Talbot Sunbeam, McRae
entered the Scottish Rally Championship and soon made a
name for himself with his speed and exciting style of driving.
His driving style drew many comparisons to Finnish ex-World
Rally Champion Ari Vatanen, who McRae had always idolised.
In 1988 he performed a giant killing act when he took the
Scottish Rally Championship series crown in a humble Vauxhall
Nova. Craving more power, his next car was a Ford Sierra
XR 4x4.
His first WRC event was the 1987 Swedish
Rally behind the wheel of his Nova, and again two years
later, driving the Sierra and finishing 15th overall. Later
that year, he finished 5th overall at Rally New Zealand
in a rear wheel drive Sierra Cosworth. By 1990 McRae was
driving a Sierra Cosworth 4x4 and achieved sixth place in
that year's RAC Rally, despite several accidents. 1991 saw
McRae turn professional as he was signed by Prodrive boss
David Richards to his Subaru team in the British Rally Championship
for an annual wage of approximately £10,000. McRae
was British Rally Champion in both 1991 and 1992, soon graduating
to the Subaru factory team at World Rally Championship level.[9]
1992 also saw Colin McRae make his début in the British
Touring Car Championship, with a one-off appearance for
the Prodrive-run BMW factory team at the Knockhill round.
In the last of the three races of the event, McRae collided
with Matt Neal. Race officials found McRae to have caused
an avoidable collision and subsequently disqualified him.
One
of the Subaru Impreza rally cars that McRae drove during
the 1996 World Rally Championship season.Main article: Subaru
World Rally Team. On his promotion for 1993, McRae initially
drove the Prodrive-built Group A Subaru Legacy alongside
Finns Ari Vatanen, Hannu Mikkola and Markku Alén.
McRae then won his first WRC rally in the car at that year's
Rally New Zealand. It was also the first rally win for the
newly formed Subaru World Rally Team, shortly before the
Legacy was due to be pensioned off in favour of the new
Subaru Impreza 555. Such were the rising fortunes of his
young Subaru factory team as they competed against the frontrunning
TTE ran Toyotas, aided by the latter team's exclusion from
the championship after the 1995 Rally Catalunya where it
was discovered that the Japanese team had been using illegal
turbochargers, it took only until 1995 for McRae to win
the drivers title, which he secured with victory in a straight
contest with his double champion team-mate, Carlos Sainz,
on the season-ending Rally of Great Britain. Although still
a winner with the outfit in individual rallies in succeeding
years, including, increasingly, more specialised events
such as the Acropolis Rally, Safari Rally and the Tour de
Corse, McRae could not better second place in the standings
in either 1996 or 1997, on both occasions behind Finland
and Mitsubishi Ralliart's Tommi Mäkinen. He did, however
help Subaru complete their run of three consecutive manufacturers'
titles during this time. In what would turn out to be his
final season with the team, in 1998 he won three more rallies
and placed third in the standings, as well as winning the
Race of Champions in Gran Canaria, the Canary Islands.
McRae
with a Ford Focus WRC at the 2001 Rally Finland.After several
years of varying success, McRae switched to the M-Sport
Ford team for 1999, driving the new Ford Focus rally car.
The deal saw McRae earning six million pounds over two years,
which at the time made him the highest earning rally driver
in history.[11] This move was immediately rewarded with
two consecutive wins at the Safari Rally and Rally Portugal.
A number of shunts and unreliability issues for the new
car for much of the rest of that season, however, resulted
in only sixth place in the championship standings overall.
Moreover, a rare personal pointless run had begun for McRae
that year which was only to be halted with a podium on the
following February's Swedish Rally, the beginning of a recovery
which saw McRae victorious in on the asphalt turns of Catalunya
and the gravel of Greece, and post 4th in the 2000 overall
standings. Midway through the 2000 season, the unreliability
of the Focus had led to McRae threatening to leave the team
if the problems continued. The upturn towards the end of
the season resulted in him deciding to renew his contract
with Ford for a further two years. McRae's intermittent
success with Ford continued into 2001, where after failing
to score in any of the first four rounds, including having
momentarily led defending winner Tommi Makinen on the stages
of the season opening Monte Carlo Rally prior to being forced
into retirement, he then went on to score three consecutive
victories in Argentina, Cyprus and Greece to tie with Mäkinen
at the top of the points table. However, having again led
the championship outright entering the final round in Great
Britain, McRae once more missed out on a possible second
title, crashing out and finishing second in the drivers
championship, two points behind Subaru's Richard Burns.
With
victory in the Safari Rally in 2002, McRae made the record
books as the driver with most event wins in the World Rally
Championship. His record has since been broken by Carlos
Sainz, Sébastien Loeb and Marcus Grönholm. McRae's
contract with Ford came to an end following the 2002 season,
and after reportedly asking for wages of five million pounds
a year, Ford decided against renewing the contract, reluctant
to commit such a high amount of their budget to a drivers
salary. The two parties split on amicable terms, with Ford's
European director of motorsport Martin Whitaker stating
"On behalf of all of us at Ford Motor Company I would
like to publicly thank Colin and Nicky for their efforts
during the past four years with the Ford team... I wish
them both well in the future." McRae said of his time
with Ford "It's been a very successful four years,
we've achieved a lot of very good results and I'm quite
happy that myself and Ford have had a very successful partnership."
For
2003, McRae signed for Citroën, a team of winning pedigree
due to its successes of the previous year with young Frenchman
Sebastien Loeb but otherwise undertaking its first complete
campaign at World Rally Championship level. McRae's second
place finish on his début in Monte Carlo alongside
Loeb and Carlos Sainz whom, aboard the Xsara WRC, helped
complete a 1-2-3 finish, transpired to be the finest result
he would achieve for the team, for the season was to end
with seventh in the drivers' championship, with no victories.
Rule changes that were to be brought in for the 2004 season
changed the previous practice of having three nominated
points-scorers within a team to two. With Loeb partway through
a multiple year contract, this meant the Citroën factory
team, under Guy Frequelin's leadership, were forced to choose
between dropping McRae or Sainz. With Sainz being the more
successful of the two during the 2003 season, it was McRae
who had to look elsewhere for 2004.[16] David Richards,
McRae's former boss at Subaru, who had by now taken over
WRC's commercial rights holders ISC and worried that the
loss of a character like McRae would damage his ability
to market the sport, set about trying to help McRae find
a drive for 2004.[17] McRae was unable to find a team, and
for the first time in over ten years he would not be competing
in the World Rally Championship.
McRae driving a Škoda Fabia WRC on the Millennium Stadium,
Cardiff super special stage of the 2005 Rally GB.As the
only other potential alternative suitors, Subaru instead
eventually chose Mikko Hirvonen to partner Petter Solberg,
McRae found himself without a drive for the 2004 season.
He instead pursued other interests, including competing
in the Dakar Rally and the 24 Hours of Le Mans(see below).
In 2004 & 2005 McRae represented
Great Britain in the Race of Champions alongside Formula
One driver and fellow Scot, David Coulthard. For the 2006
event England and Scotland entered separate teams with McRae
and Coulthard re-uniting to represent Scotland. McRae then
returned to the series for one off drives for Skoda on the
2005 Rally GB and Rally Australia, respectively finishing
seventh and retiring due to a clutch problem on the final
leg of the rally, the latter dashing hopes for what may
otherwise have been only the team's second ever podium place
after the 2001 Safari Rally.
On 5 August 2006, McRae competed for
Subaru in the first live televised American rally in Los
Angeles as part of the X-Games. McRae rolled the car on
the penultimate corner after landing awkwardly from a jump,
which damaged the front bumper and left front tyre. Despite
this McRae's time was only 0.13 seconds slower than eventual
winner Travis Pastrana. McRae was, though, to have one more
opportunity at world championship level: he was unexpectedly
entered for his final rally by semi-works Kronos Citroën
at Rally Turkey in September, where he replaced Sébastien
Loeb while the Frenchman recovered from an injury he sustained
in a cycling accident immediately prior to the event. A
final-stage alternator problem consigned him and returning
co-driver Nicky Grist, to a final placing outside the top
ten.
The Ferrari 550-GTS Maranello driven
by McRae at the 2004 24 Hours of Le MansMcRae’s competitive
spirit also led him to compete in racing series other than
the WRC. In September 2002 he tried his hand at oval racing
when he took part in the Ascar (UK version of NASCAR) race
at the Rockingham Motor Speedway, Northamptonshire; eventually
finishing in sixth place. McRae rejoined Prodrive for the
2004 24 Hours of Le Mans where he took third place in the
GTS class, and ninth position overall in a Ferrari 550-GTS
Maranello partnering Darren Turner and Rickard Rydell. Fellow
countryman, and Le Mans winner Allan McNish commented that
"Colin has adapted far better than people expected"
to endurance sportscar racing. McRae, made his debut on
the gruelling Dakar Rally Raid with Nissan in January 2004,
and impressed the team by scoring two stage wins on his
way to a memorable finish on the gruelling trans-Sahara
event. He returned to the Dakar in 2005 and was fastest
on two of the first three stages in Morocco, before crashing
out of the rally towards the end of stage six.
In August 2007, McRae claimed to still
be working on finding a seat for the 2008 WRC season, stating
that "if it doesn't happen next year, then I won't
(return) because you can only be out of something at that
level for so long."
Codemasters released the first Colin
McRae Rally video game in 1998. Version 2, known as Colin
McRae 2.0, was released in the year 2000, for Sony's PlayStation
and for the PC; it was also ported to the Game Boy Advance
in 2002. A third version found a wide audience on the PC
and Xbox. Versions 04 and 2005 arrived in 2004 on all major
platforms. 2005 was also remade for Sony's PSP and Nokia's
N-Gage. Colin McRae: Dirt was the title for the next instalment
of the series, which launched in 2007 for the PC, Xbox 360
and PlayStation 3. The PlayStation 3 edition was released
in the UK on 14 September, the day before McRae's death.[21]
A special edition for mobile phones will also be available
from Codemasters Mobile. Colin McRae: Dirt 2 was released
on the Xbox 360 and the PS3 on the 11 of September 2009,
the PC version is being released in December.
A Colin McRae R4 on display at the Goodwood
Festival of SpeedColin McRae chose the 2006 Goodwood Festival
of Speed to unveil the McRae R4, which had been conceived
at the beginning of 2005. The intention was to make a cheaper
alternative to WRCs (World Rally Cars) with significantly
lower running costs. The McRae R4 was designed for use in
rallying, rally cross, circuit racing and ice racing events,
with the possibility of a one-make race series. Designed
by Colin McRae and Dave Plant and built by DJM Race Preparation,
the McRae R4’s chassis is based on a steel safety
cage with carbon paneling front and rear, and a steel-covered
cockpit area. Suspension consists of twin wishbones with
Proflex dampers. The body styling has been done by Keith
Burden and Tom Webster. It appears that some components
of the vehicle have been taken from existing production
cars, the doorline in particular appears very close to that
of the Ford Ka. The engine is a naturally-aspirated 4 cylinder,
2.5 litre Millington Diamond Engine producing 350 BHP. Transmission
is via a six-speed gearbox, manual or semi-auto, and by
mechanical front and rear differentials with the option
of mechanical or active central differential. The car can
be produced in either 2 or 4 wheel drive formats. Alison
McRae has said that she would like production of the car
to continue following Colin's death.
McRae
died on 15 September 2007 when his helicopter, a Eurocopter
AS350, crashed 1 mile north of Lanark, Scotland, close to
the McRae family home.[23] McRae was piloting the helicopter
at the time of the crash. McRae's five year old son Johnny,
and two family friends, Graeme Duncan and Johnny's six year
old friend Ben Porcelli, also died in the crash. McRae's
previously active website, ColinMcRae.com, was later replaced
with a memorial screen stating a few details about the crash,
and then with a short statement released on behalf of McRae's
father, Jimmy, and later a book of condolences.
The
funeral for Colin and Johnny took place on Wednesday 26
September at Daldowie Crematorium near Glasgow, conducted
by the Rev Tom Houston, who had married the McRaes, and
the Rev Steven Reid, chaplain at Johnny's school. An address
was given by Robbie Head, a former rally driver and commentator
who was a close friend of McRae's, with the Rev Houston
giving the benediction. McRae's niece and nephews performed
the tune Highland Cathedral, a popular funeral song. Also,
the song "(Sittin' on) the Dock of the Bay" by
Otis Redding, a favourite song of McRae's, was played when
the family entered the chapel; and The Proclaimers' song
"I'm on My Way" was played when they left. Colin
and Johnny McRae were cremated in the same coffin. Among
the attendees at the funeral were fellow Scottish racing
drivers Jackie Stewart and Dario Franchitti.
A
"Celebration of Life" service took place at St
Nicholas Church in Lanark on Sunday 30 September at 4pm.
Images from McRae's career and personal life were displayed
on large video screens outside the church. Around 700 mourners
filled the church, with crowds of up to 15,000 outside.
Shortly before 4pm, a lone bagpiper played "Flower
of Scotland" as the family arrived at the church. The
service was conducted by the Rev Alison Meikle, who said
"Two weeks ago Lanark was struck by silence. A terrible
silence bought at an enormous price. However, in our tears
love is stronger than death." Later, the Kenny Rogers
and Dolly Parton song "Islands in the Stream",
a favourite of Johnny's, was played. Friends of the pair
shared poems and anecdotes from the McRaes' lives. After
the service, Colin McRae's widow, brother and father bowed
and applauded the crowds who had gathered outside to pay
tribute to the McRaes.
(c)
Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 2009