Our Two Cents: Automotive heroes we’d like to be

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The mission of Our Two Cents has been to seek enrichment from our staff of automotive professionals/enthusiasts on a variety of topics. Clearly, we have a diverse background, so why not put it to good use for everyone’s benefit?

For this episode, we asked our staff a very pointed question: If you could be one person from Automotive History, who would it be?

Dwight D. Eisenhower

hmdb.org | Jason Voigt

Managing Editor Stefan Lombard started us in a good, yet unexpected direction. We all like Ike, especially when we hop on the interstate to enjoy his 1956 creation for public enjoyment and national security. As Stefan said:

“The staggering number of staggering automotive personalities is, uh, staggering. But for some reason I keep coming back to Dwight D. Eisenhower. He’s the Supreme Allied Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Force one day. And he’s Head Honcho of the American Interstate System the next. The guy won a war and then paved the way for hundreds of millions of us to explore this magnificent country. Not a bad legacy!”

Enzo Ferrari

Enzo Ferrari cockpit portrait high angle
ISC Archives/CQ-Roll Call Group

David Zenlea, Managing Editor, gives us multiple reasons to be Enzo Ferrari. Can’t disagree with any of them!

“I’d be Enzo. For all the misty eyed reasons but also because Italy in the mid-twentieth century seems like a great place to be rich, famous, and powerful. Think of the food. The wine! The villas!”

Burkhard Goeschel

Dr. Burkhard Goeschel BMW 645Ci convertible 2004 detroit debut
Jeffrey Sauger/Bloomberg/Getty Images

Executive Editor Eric Weiner dug deep into BMW’s corporate machinations behind one of his favorite machines. And he found a very interesting person in BMW history:

“First, let me state that I don’t know that I’d want to be any of the people in the next sentence. But that said, I’d love to have been a fly on the wall in the boardroom when Burkhard Goeschel was selling BMW’s board on the Z3M Coupe. He had to explain that it was going to be as affordable as possible to adapt from the roadster, and I suspect he may have gone light on details about the ultimate design.”

David Scott

NASA

Senior Editor Brandan Gillogly has once again thrown us a delicious curveball, as he decided on the man who first drove on the moon!

“My first thoughts on this subject included some notable racing milestones. Mickey Thompson had a number of great feats, including running in excess of 400 mph at Bonneville in 1960 and driving a 427 Corvette at Daytona in 1963, but I think one of the coolest “firsts” goes to David Scott.

During the Apollo 15 mission, Astronaut David Scott became the first person to drive on the Moon when he piloted the Lunar Roving Vehicle, serious bragging rights. Pick up the pace Neil, we’ve got lunar landscapes to see!”

Shigeru Uehara

Honda

Editor Nathan Petroelje picked one heckuva automotive engineer, who has made an impact on so many vehicles…and many writers.

“I’m a sucker for a high-revving four-cylinder engine in a lightweight car that wants to pick fights with expensive exotics, so naturally, the original Acura Integra Type R is a hero of mine. The man behind it, Shigeru Uehara, is responsible for some of Honda’s greatest machines, including the Type R, but also the S2000 and the NSX. To have his tuning ability, and to be able to experience the first time that he got each of these cars ‘right’ would be incredible.”

Steve McQueen

Steve McQueen on Triumph Motorcycle Germany
Bettmann Archive via Getty Images

Editor Bryan Gerould picked a person near and dear to many of our hearts, but his reasoning put a unique spin on why it would be so great to be Steve McQueen:

“The aura of Steve McQueen and his life is undeniable. From The Great Escape to Bullitt to Le Mans, spending my years on earth as the leading man of some of the most iconic films in automotive history would’ve been one hell of a way to go.

Afforded the gift of knowing how memorable some scenes ultimately became, this answer is obvious for me. Plus I would’ve gotten a front-row seat watching stuntman Bud Ekins do his thing and marvel at the dude’s daring. Not a bad day at work.”

Sam Smith

Sam Smith portrait
Kyle Van Hoften

Yes indeed, our Editor at Large Sam Smith, answered this question by wanting to be himself. But that’s not the candid feedback of an egomaniac, quite the contrary:

I don’t want to be someone else, I want to be me…but with a time-travel machine. I will go back to watch/help/participate in about three thousand separate moments. Not only motorsport or engineering—that’s just the stuff top of mind:

  • Nuvolari’s win at the Ring in 1935 against the Nazis.
  • The moment the first Model T rolled off the line.
  • The day Dan Gurney won at Spa in an F1 car of his own design and build.
  • When Harry Miller met Leo Goossen.
  • The day Carroll Shelby realized Phil Remington was a genius.
  • The day Pete Brock and John Morton and the BRE Datsun 510 team lost, then won, at Laguna Seca, in 1971.
  • The first time Bonnie and Clyde left a bank robbery in a Ford V-8.
  • When Gordon Murray first drove a McLaren F1. When Paul Rosche first ran an S70/2 on the dyno. And on, and on, and on…

Carroll Shelby

Carroll Shelby portrait
Bernard Cahier/Getty Images

Steven Cole Smith, our Special Projects Editor, has met a fair number of automotive celebrities in his career. Perhaps that’s precisely why Carroll Shelby is his pick of the litter:

“Bob Lutz is a possibility, Phil Hill and Dan Gurney are others, but despite all his personal travails, including heart transplants, the man I saw having the most fun was Carroll Shelby. He was a slippery fellow in business dealings, sure, but he leaves a lasting legacy that will outlive us all. And I look good in a cowboy hat.”

Anonymous engineers?

Honda

Senior Video Lead Ben Woodworth knows what he likes, but not necessarily who was behind those things. Wouldn’t it be great if we could learn about someone who made the products that had such an impact on the esteemed Mr. Woodworth?

“I don’t know much about the people behind any of the vehicles I covet. Maybe I need to watch more Jason Cammisa Revelations episodes on YouTube? (You are the king of cross promotion. Now get them to talk about me! – SM) 

Anyway, most of the old cars I love are late-80s to mid-90s Hondas and Toyotas. So perhaps the person I’d choose is whomever designed Toyota’s All-Trac system. Or Honda’s RT4WD system. Or maybe the person who designed the wagons and vans those systems went into? I don’t know, as my mom always told me I should just be happy being me!”

Terry Fullerton

terryfullerton.co.uk

Senior Editor Eddy Eckart gives us a deep cut into the world of automotive motorsport:

“I’d like to be Terry Fullerton during his tussles with Ayrton Senna on the kart track in the late ’70s. To grasp the talent it took to regularly beat Senna in the purest form of the sport, if only for a moment, boy, that’d be something.”

Tony Kuchta

Not pictured, Tony Kuchta. Ford

I am inclined to pick people in the same vein as Nathan Petroelje and Eric Weiner, but I generally prefer folks who are even harder to Google. Putting my money where my mouth is, here’s my story on the work of Dennis Foerschler. Stories like these are likely to never wind up in a social media mention, a PR-blessed story, or a magazine article. And that’s a shame, as such automotive professionals deserve much better.

That’s where Tony Kuchta comes into focus. Rumor has it that Ford made Kuchta take early retirement because of his team’s collective failures in the design and implementation of the 1989 Ford Thunderbird. As this book suggested, the oversized, overbudgeted Thunderbird needed a corporate scapegoat, and it would be both heartbreaking and enlightening to walk a mile in that man’s shoes. The questions I would ask myself, had I earned this opportunity:

  • What did/does he feel when passing by a 1989–97 Ford Thunderbird or Mercury Cougar on the street?
  • Is he tempted to pry off every Ford blue oval he sees in a Walmart parking lot?
  • Where/how did he find solace?
  • Did he bounce back from this setback?
  • Did the experience make him a better person, eventually?
  • If he could do anything differently, would he?

These questions are a touch more personal for me, as I’ve been a victim of scapegoating in a past career. Over time I realized the experience made me a better manager, a kinder person, and hopefully a more compassionate individual in my personal relationships. I would like to know exactly what Tony Kuchta did when faced with similar circumstances, and I suspect I am not alone.

Whose shoes would you want to walk a mile in? Or maybe drive 100 miles? Let us know in the comments below.

 

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Comments

    Its a toss up, Richard Petty or Wilbur Shaw. Both had stellar carriers in the racing world.

    Paul Newman. Beautiful Wife, Great Actor, Loved Racing and gave millions to charity thru his company Newman’s Own. He was a Great Human Being.

    It was the 1970’s when I first started loving cars as a pre-teen and no one captured my attention more than Richard Petty, “The King”. He earned that moniker, crowned his head with that cowboy hat and looked like he was born wearing it. He was racing against names that are still legendary in Motorsport. The vintage STP key chain I hang my Chevy K-10 keys on brings me right back to those days. Long live the King.

    I’ve read every word and name of this article and comments and I find it hard to argue with any name or reason. But, from the initial question to all the thought afterward, my choice is still Dan Gurney. Simply read his obituary from the LA Times to understand: https://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-dan-gurney-obit-20180114-story.html#:~:text=Dan%20Gurney%20became%20the%20first,in%20a%20car%20he%20designed.&text=Dan%20Gurney%2C%20a%20leading%20player,He%20was%2086.

    I would have liked to be Harry Luzader, creator of that beautiful 1932 Ford 5-window coupe drag car. Having looked at the centerfold from Hot Rod Magazine, of that car doing a wheelstand at the drag races, on a daily basis on my dorm room bulletin board, is what really gave me the drive to make it through college. Thanks Harry! There it is, I said it. Now all I wish I would have done is bought his car when the oppurtunity arose. No doubt, I would still have it today.

    Tim Richmond, badass race car driver in several different classes, lover and genuine nice guy!

    After reading his biography “All But My Life”, I would have to say Stirling Moss. The description of the Mille Miglia run in the Mercedes-Benz SLR made me want to be there. Especially the unforeseen airborne stretch from a rise in the road they hit at speed – unnoticed because in the practice run they were going much slower. Only the balance of the SLR and Moss’s firm hand on the wheel kept them from crashing.

    Sir Jack Brabham – how many have raced in F1, won the world title (three times), and then designed and built their own car and again raced and won? He also raced successfully in Indianapolis.

    What about Ed Cole? While head of Chevrolet division, he was behind the long lived 265, 283, 327…..V 8 motors that are still soldering on today.. then the ground breaking unibody, air cooled, aluminum boxer engined Corvairs? That was some feat in the GM world at that time..

    Stirling Moss – The greatest driver to never have won the F-1 title! A proper gentleman who could survive equally well in the proper social circles as well as in the pits with the real men who made things happen.

    If I’m allowed a second choice, it would be Denise McCluggage. What a wonderful woman who did so much in all forms of racing despite being of the ‘delicate sex’ in a man’s world. On top of everything else, she was a great author of her own books as well as producing wonder articles and columns in AutoWeek Magazine!

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