Michael Roe (racing driver)

Summary

Michael Roe (born 8 August 1955[1]) is a former racing driver from Naas, Ireland.

Roe began racing in Formula Ford and won the 1978 Formula Ford Festival. The following year he drove in British Formula Three and finished in 9th place in his rookie campaign with 2 podium finishes for David Clark's team. In 1983 he moved to the United States to compete in the single-seat Can-Am series where he finished 8th in the championship. In 1984 Roe won 7 of the 10 rounds of the series on his way to dominating the championship, setting a series record for wins in a season as well as poles in a season (all 10 rounds).[2][3][4] The following year Roe competed in CART Championship Car racing and made four starts for Hemelgarn Racing with a best finish of 7th at Portland followed up by an 8th-place finish later that month at Meadowlands Racetrack. His two point-scoring finishes placed him 27th in the championship. He also attempted to qualify his Hemelgarn Lola-Cosworth for the Indianapolis 500, but he was bumped from the field.[5]

Racing record edit

PPG Indycar Series edit

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position)

Year Team Chassis Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Rank Points Ref
1985 Hemelgarn Racing Lola T900 Cosworth DFX V8t LBH
21
INDY
DNQ
MIL POR
7
MEA
8
CLE
26
MCH ROA POC MDO SAN MCH LAG PHX MIA 27th 11 [6]

24 Hours of Le Mans results edit

Year Team Co-drivers Car Class Laps Pos. Class
pos.
1989   Aston Martin
  Ecurie Ecosse
  Costas Los
  Brian Redman
Aston Martin AMR1 C1 340 11th 9th
1990   Nissan Performance Technology Inc.   Bob Earl
  Steve Millen
Nissan R90CK C1 311 17th 17th

References edit

  1. ^ Michael Roe, Where Are They Now, OldRacingCars.com, 2016
  2. ^ Can-Am 1984 season review, OldRacingCars.com, 2016
  3. ^ Can-Am 1984, ClassicCars.com, last updated 10 April 2003
  4. ^ Young, Fred. Can-Am Champions Archived 2009-06-26 at the Wayback Machine, DeepThrottle.com History, 2004
  5. ^ Michael Roe, ChampCarStats.com
  6. ^ "Michael Roe – 1985 CART Results". Racing-Reference. NASCAR Digital Media, LLC. Retrieved 17 August 2023.
Sporting positions
Preceded by Formula Ford Festival Winner
1978
Succeeded by
Don MacLeod
Preceded by Can-Am Champion
1984
Succeeded by