Bruce McLaren honoured

Bruce McLaren is remembered, 40 years on from death in an accident at Goodwood
McLaren honours fallen founder

McLaren has celebr🍷ated the 40th anniversary of the death of founder Bruce McLaren at its Woking base.

McLaren died on 2 June 1970 while testing a ꧃Can-Am car at the♕ Goodwood circuit. He was 32 years old.

To mark the occasion, McLaren employees down tools for a minutes silence at 3.15pm on the McLaren Technology Centre boulevard before th💎e ear-splitting 8.0-litre Chevrolet V🦂8 in the back of one of classic M8D Can-Am cars was revved for a further minute.

Tyler Alexander, who work🎃ed with McLaren in the early years of the company, was present for the ceremony alongside executive chairman Ron Dennis.

"The 40th anniversary of Bruce McLaren's death gives us the opportunity to reflect on his legacy, and to appreciate just how much of his original vision still lives on within our team," McLaren Mercedes team principal Martin Whitmarsh said. "Bruce made his name not only as a skilled and disciplined racing driver, but also as a pragmatic engineer with the inspir🥀ation, vision and determination to take on and beat the greatest teams in motorsport.

"It's an ethos that still holds true to t😼his day, and one which Ron was careful to foster and promote when he assumed control of the team in 1980. Through Ron's guidance and stewardship, McLaren remains a company that is passionate about technology and engineering, and which is set apart by its keen sense of competition, attention to detail and desire to be the best.

"Bruce's values have seen us maintain a winning legacy throughout six decades of competition, and have rewarded us with victories in the Formula 1 world championship, the North American Can-Am series, the𓃲 Indy 500, Formula 5000 and the Le Mans 24 Hours. Winning will always be central to the McLaren DNA.

"We are honoured to uphold the McLaren name. And, for many millions of people around the world, the name McLaren is motor racing - there can be no greater testame𒁏nt to Bruce than that."

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