Black Friday Deal: Get 50% Off Memberships Until December 6!

Broken Neck, Broken Dreams

Evans made the best showing of his Formula One career aboard the Stanley BRM during the 1975 Race of Champions at Brands Hatch. Photo: Paul Kooyman

My early days of racing gave very few opportunities, starting with a Sprite I slowly progressed to Formula Ford and then onto Formula Three. However, had it not been for the support of Alan McKechnie, I may not have “made it” at all. Injury, too, was something that hindered me. While testing at Castle Combe I sustained a broken neck following a crash, Nigel Mansell-like, but with a lot less fuss, of course. The accident happened mid-season in July 1971, the wrong time of year, in a motor racing sense, to have an injury like that—not that there’s ever a good time to break your neck. I was taken to Bath Hospital and after a while transferred to Chertsey Hospital where I had a bone graft, three or four vertebrae wired together, and nursed back to full fitness by November—they did a great job.

Bob EvansPhoto: Pete Austin
Bob Evans
Photo: Pete Austin

Racing wise, I was offered a Formula Ford drive by Neil Trundle and his partner, Ron Dennis, I think they built the car together to pass an engineering exam. The drive was arranged by a friend of Neil’s who later worked at McKechnie Racing. I remember feeling very tired after the race, but at least I came through it. Following that, McKechnie Racing rented an F3 March in the Christmas race series, and I remember that Alan clubbed together with Tony Hilder (designer of the McKechnie Puma) to pay for it.

Sportscar digest double leader board

Become a Member & Get Ad-Free Access To This Article (& About 6,000+ More)

Access to the full article is limited to paid subscribers only. Our membership removes most ads, lets you enjoy unlimited access to all our premium content, and offers you awesome discounts on partner products. Enjoy our premium content.

Become a member today!

Already a Member?