Although
Bucknum had been competing in sports cars in America since
1957, his selection by Honda to spearhead their 1964 Grand
Prix challenge was strange indeed. His lack of international
racing pedigree had its attractions for the secretive Japanese,
since Ronnie could test and race the car without raising
undue attention or expectations, and the opposition would
never really know just how well it was progressing in that
first season. However, the novice did well just to survive
a daunting debut at the Nurburgring which ended when the
car suffered a steering failure.
Two
more races were safely completed before the team signed
the vastly more experienced Richie Ginther to head their
1965 challenge and embarked on a winter of testing at Suzuka,
during which the unlucky Bucknum again suffered a steering
failure, crashed and this time broke his leg. This set him
back when the season began and he predictably played second
fiddle to his team-mate, although he did score points with
a fifth place in Mexico as Ginther swept aside the opposition
to record Honda's first Grand Prix win.
If
nothing else, everybody now knew who Ronnie Bucknum was
and he was invited to join the Ford team for 1966, finishing
third at Le Mans with Hutcherson. Honda still thought well
of their man and once two of their 3-litre cars were available
he returned for the end-of-season American races. Although
this was his final bow in Grands Prix, in many ways Bucknum's
career as a racing driver was really just beginning. After
more sports cars in 1967, Ronnie went racing in Can-Am and
USAC the following year, sensationally winning at Michigan
in only his second oval race with an Eagle. Subsequently
he raced sports and Trans-Am cars for Roger Penske and teamed
up with Sam Posey in the NART Ferrari in long-distance events
in the early seventies, by which time the Marine crew-cut
had been replaced by collar-length hair and a beard! Bucknum,
who was later to suffer from diabetes, died at the comparatively
young age of 57 in April 1992.
(c)
'Who is Who' by Steve Small, 2000