This
personable Colombian driver could have made a good career
for himself in Formula 1 had he not chosen to move into
Indy Car racing at the end of 1983 when no suitable F1 drive
was available, for, on his speedy passage to the top, Roberto
had already displayed genuine talent. Joint second in the
British F3 series in the unfashionable Argo, and an immediate
winner at Thruxton in his first Formula 2 season, Guerrero's
fine performances caught the eye of Mo Nunn, who gave him
the Ensign drive for 1982. Roberto did extremely well in
difficult circumstances, as he did in his second season
following the team's merger with Theodore.
So
it was off to the States, and stardom, Guerrero finishing
second in the 1984 Indy 500, and winning two races in 1987,
at Phoenix and Mid-Ohio, before a crash while testing at
Indy left him in a coma for 17 days. He made a full recovery
but his career never quite regained its earlier momentum,
and he became bogged down in the largely disappointing Alfa
Romeo Indy programme until he joined Kenny Bernstein's team
in mid-1991. Roberto took pole at Indy in 1992 but crashed
on the warm-up lap and spent the rest of the campaign on
the sidelines. He then signed with Bernstein for a full
season in 1993, but after a generally lacklustre year he
lost his ride with three races remaining.
No
longer capable of getting a full-time drive, Roberto joined
forces with Pagan Racing in 1994 and did well to scrape
into the Indy 500 as 33rd and final qualifier with a two-year-old
Lola-Buick. Unfortunately Guerrero, now a US citizen, was
posted as first retirement again when he spun into the wall.
He remained with the little team for 1995, targeting the
Brickyard once more (though he raced at Phoenix as a shakedown
for the month of May), and this time things went much better.
He finished a creditable 12th, having lost time under caution
early on.
When
the Indy Racing League was formed in 1996 it must have come
as 'manna from heaven' to the likes of Guerrero. Not only
did it give him a racing lifeline, but it also represented
a tantalising opportunity to have his image engraved on
the magnificent Borg Warner Trophy, something that he came
agonisingly close to achieving back in 1987 when, after
a totally dominant performance, the race was snatched from
his grasp by Al Unser Snr when clutch problems at a pit
stop slowed him near the finish.
Roberto
has been a regular competitor in this much-maligned series
but, thus far, victory in the Indy 500 still eludes him.
(c)
'Who is Who' by Steve Small, 2000