Jo Ramírez

This name uses Spanish naming customs: the first or paternal family name is Ramírez and the second or maternal family name is Fernández.
Jo Ramírez

Jo Ramírez (right)
Born Joaquín Ramírez Fernández
(1941-08-20) August 20, 1941
Mexico City, Mexico
Nationality Mexico Mexican
Other names Jo
Education UNAM
Occupation F1 Mechanic, Author
Known for Team McLaren Coordinator (1984–2001)
Religion Catholic
Spouse(s) Bea Ramírez
Children 1

Joaquín "Jo" Ramírez Fernández (born August 20, 1941, Mexico City) is an author and retired employee of several sports car racing teams. From 1984 to 2001 Ramírez was coordinator of the McLaren Formula One team, including during the infamous Prost / Senna clash of the late-1980s.

Early life

The third of eight children, Ramírez was born in Mexico City and studied mechanical engineering at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM). Contrary to his father desires he dropped out in 1960 to follow his friend Ricardo Rodríguez to Europe. Ramírez worked as apprentice mechanic for Scuderia Ferrari for two years. When Rodríguez died in a racing crash in the Mexican GP in 1962, Ramírez took a job in Maserati first and later in Lamborghini's as a mechanic of their new line of high performance road cars. In 1964 he moved to England where he worked for Ford on the GT40, before joining Dan Gurney’s All American Racers team in 1966.

Formula One career

During the 1960s and 70s Ramírez worked for several teams, including Dan Gurney's Eagle, Tyrrell, where founder Ken Tyrrell advised him to keep a diary of his time in the sport, and for Wilson and Emerson Fittipaldi in their Fittipaldi Copersucar F1 team.[1]

In December 1983 Ramírez joined the front-running McLaren Formula One operation as Team Coordinator, becoming close friends with many top drivers including Alain Prost, Ayrton Senna, David Coulthard and Mika Häkkinen.

In 2001, after more than 40 years Ramírez retired from the Great Circus and was advised by McLaren team manager Ron Dennis not to write his life story as no one would be interested. Ramírez was left in little doubt that Dennis' true aim was to stop any undesirable details of the team's inner workings from becoming public. As a parting gift from F1 David Coulthard and Mika Häkkinen gave him a Harley-Davidson Road King.

Statistics[2]

After Formula One

In 2005 Ramírez published his life story: Jo Ramirez: Memoirs of a racing man.

Ramírez also has written the foreword of some books like: The Brothers Rodríguez,[3] 2007 and La Carrera Panamericana: "The World's Greatest Road Race!",[4] 2008.

During F1 seasons Ramírez has a column in the Mexican newspaper Reforma.

Ramírez was a great support and inspiration to Mexicans talents like Adrián Fernández, Salvador Durán, Checo Pérez and Esteban Gutiérrez.

Ramírez is fluent in Spanish, English, Italian and Portuguese.

Carrera Panamericana

After his retirement from F1, Ramírez has participated in the Carrera Panamericana, including the fourth place in the A+ Historic category in 2010 in a Volvo.[5]

In the 2012 edition Ramírez and his co-driver Alberto "Beto" Cruz got the podium with a third place in the category of A+ Historic 2,000 cc. Ramírez drove his Volvo P-1800 of Scuderia Telmex and concludes on the 50th overall with a time of 5h.55m.3.1s.[6][7] [8]

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/22/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.