Car Guy Magazine Car Guy Magazine issue 115 | Page 16

ABOVE Three generations, Marco, Michael and Mario Andretti. “Bobby Unser clearly broke the rules,” Andretti says. But Unser and team owner Roger Penske challenged before a United States Auto Club panel, which reduced the severity of Unser’s penalty and instead imposed a $40,000 fine and reinstated his victory. “It was farce,” says Andretti. “I was given all of the accolades. I was the one that took the photos with the trophy. I was the one that was giving the keys to the pace car at the banquet and then this appeal took it all back.” These frustrating racing episodes have done nothing but fortify Andretti’s steely determination, and it’s a trait that has served him well in his post-racing business ventures. These include Andretti’s numerous spokesman roles for companies such as Chevron, Magnaflow Performance Exhaust components and Environmental Systems Products, a company that manufactures emissions testing equipment. Andretti is also pooling his forty years of tire testing experience--much of it during the height of ruthless competition between Firestone and Goodyear that wrought dramatic racing tire innovations--to serve as a spokesman for Bridgestone Firestone. 14 CarGuyMagazine.com When Andretti began testing in 1964, the racing tire was six inches wide with treads that were grooved into the rubber by hand. It was through such testing in 1966 that Andretti stumbled upon the superior performance of racing slicks. “It was a fluke, actually,” he says. Just before the tire test at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Andretti learned that no time had allotted to grove his tires. “And I was told ‘go out on a slick but be very, very careful,’” he remembers. He proceeded to shatter the track lap record running on the slicks, clocking lap speeds approaching 167 miles per hour. By 1970, racing on slicks was the norm.