It’s not easy being A. J. Foyt, nor is keeping up with him. Art Graner presents a comprehensive portrait of arguably the greatest racing driver ever in a biography released earlier this fall. A. J. Foyt: Survivor, Champion, Legend, Volume1 covers the mercurial Texan from his birth in 1935 through the 1977 season. The second volume, due out in 2026, will continue his story.
The book is arranged chronologically by years, which makes it easy to follow and to return to a chapter for reference. Many of his races are mentioned, some in detail, but many just a brief synopsis of Foyt’s performance and the race winner.
The length of the book I think is reasonable, considering the amount of time it covers. Below are some highlights, followed by some of my thoughts.
Foyt has a desire to race virtually since he was born. At age five he challenges the best midget driver at Houston’s Buff Stadium, Don Cossey, to a match race. Details of the race are sketchy, but it sounds like it was a fun couple of laps. Foyt has wanted to do nothing but race his entire life. He drops out of high school to work at his father’s garage.
Several times Foyt says that he loves racing and plans to race until he decides to quit. It is a decision that never comes in this volume, even after his triumphant fourth win in the Indianapolis 500.
Foyt spends several seasons racing as often as he can in any type of car in any part of the country. He and wife Lucy, whom he married while she was still in high school, eventually decide that A. J. will race, and Lucy will stay home with their infant son.
Foyt enters Indycar racing in 1957 at the Illinois State Fairgrounds in Springfield. He asks Rodger Ward for advice on which team to drive for. Ward suggested Chapman Root. Foyt thinks Ward is trying to steer him to an inferior car and goes to another choice. Foyt gloats when he makes the race and the Root car doesn’t. but the rest of the season Foyt struggles and th Root team does well. A rivalry between Ward and Foyt begins and last several years as the battle for championships.
Foyt’s first Indianapolis 500 in 1958 comes when Jimmy Bryan leaves the Dean Van Lines team and Foyt gets the ride. The relationship lasted a couple years. Foyt becomes frustrated and goes to another team midseason so he can win races but eventually returns to the Dean team when the other ride does not pan out. A pattern of ride hopping to find the car that can win begins.
His first seven years in Indycar are extremely successful, with Indianapolis 500 wins and four national championships. He is fortunate not be involved in any of the horrific crashes in those years. That situation changes in 1965 during a stock car race at Riverside, when he loses his brakes going into one of the fastest curves on the circuit. The rolls down an embankment. The first people to reach his car believe he is dead. His recovery takes several months,
Foyt also races stock cars, both USAC stocks and NASCAR. I was surprised by how much stock car racing he does. Foyt wins the Daytona 500 in 1972 after nearly winning the year before.
In addition, to his racing, Foyt takes on business ventures, including a hOuston Chevrolet dealership. He develops relationships with Goodyear and Ford, and eventually becomes the sole builder and supplier of Ford engines.
Thoughts
There is a lot of detail in this biography, but if you are as huge an A. J. Foyt fan as I am, it is not a bothersome amount.
My favorite chapter is 1967, when Foyt follows his third Indianapolis 500 win with a dramatic victory in the 24 hours of Le Mans with Dan Gurney. May be because I had been to le Mans this summer, but reading details of the 1967 race, which I did not know a lot about, and learning how different then track was sixty years ago I found fascinating.
Several things surprised me about the story-
His heavy involvement in stock car racing . He was virtually running two full time series in one season.
I was not aware that USAC held Indycar/stock car doubleheaders on a regular basis through the 70s.
I found the biography refreshing in that it presented Foyt warts and all. Many biographies tend to focus on the positive, but Garner presents all sides of Foyt.
A. J. Foyt: Survivor, Champion, Legend, Volume1 is available through Octane Press for $29.99.