"DREAM TEAM"" DAYTONA WINNING PORSCHE  962 CONFIRMED
FOR NEXT WEEKEND'S AMELIA ISLAND
 CONCOURS



          
      
            
            Al Unser's "dream team" Porsche 962 prototype that won the 1985 Rolex 24 at Daytona is a confirmed entrant in the 22nd Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance Cars of Al Unser Sr. class.
 
            The winner of the 1985 Rolex 24 proved that fast and steady does indeed win the race. So does a cast of superstars. Al Unser Sr., a three-time Indy 500 winner that February weekend, joined four-time Indy 500 winner AJ Foyt, Porsche superstar Bob Wollek and Thierry Boutsen in the number-8 Porsche 962 at Daytona to open his 1985 racing season. They faced a multi-class 76-car field led by the favorite Porsche 962 team of Al Holbert, Derek Bell and Al Unser Jr.
 
            The fans and press loved the Father vs. Son Porsche duel. It was made even more complex because Foyt and Wollek had the flu. Plus this was the senior Unser's first night race, a fact unknown to everyone but him.
 





 
         
During the night the Unser/Foyt/Wollek Porsche 962 was as much as 13 laps behind the leading #14 Holbert Porsche. But just after dawn fuel feed problems hobbled the leading #14 Porsche. The problem persisted throughout Sunday morning and their leading margin eroded to just two laps as the healthy Unser/Foyt/Wollek Porsche 962 began to close.
           
            Foyt and Wollek had won the 1983 Rolex 24 for Porsche and car entrant Preston Henn in an atmosphere of acrimony when Foyt was a last minute substitute. But by the start of the 1985 Rolex 24 the odd couple of the Texan and the Frenchman were fast and firm allies of one mind. As the Frenchman prepared for his final two-hour stint Fo yt gallantly handed Wollek his gloves and helmet. At the checkered flag the international team of Porsche ace Wollek and the Indy 500 winners had turned a 13 lap deficit into a 17 lap lead, and Al Unser added yet another major international victory to his resume.
 
On November 9, 1985 at Tamiami Park Al Sr. won his third Indy Car title in the last few laps of the Miami 200 mile season finale defeating his son for the national championship by just a single point.






"This Porsche 962 shows the depth of 'Big Al's' versatility," said Bill Warner, founder and Chairman of the Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance. "The '85 Rolex 24 was his first Daytona 24 Hours and his first night race. At the end of that season he won the CART title in an open wheel Indy car: he can win in any kind of car, day or night, on any kind of circuit or track."
 


About The Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance
  

Now in its third decade, the Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance is among the top automotive events in the world. Always held the second full weekend in March, "The Amelia" draws over 250 rare vehicles from collections around the world to The Golf Club of Amelia Island and The Ritz-Carlton, Amelia Island for a celebration of the automobile like no other. Since 1996, the show's Foundation has donated over $3.0 million to Community Hospice of Northeast Florida, Inc., Spina Bifida of Jacksonville, The Navy Marine Corps Relief Society, Shop with Cops, and other deserving charities. In 2013 and 2016 the Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance won Octane Magazine's EFG International Historic Motoring Event of the Year award.The 22nd annual Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance is scheduled for March 10-12, 2017. For more information, visit www.ameliaconcours.org.

 

 
    
  
  
Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance
3016 Mercury Road
Jacksonville, Florida 32207
Join Our Mailing List!     Like us on Facebook     Follow us on Twitter