Indianapolis Motor Speedway, May 1960. Jim Rathmann raced in the AAA and USAC Championship Car series in the 1949-1950 and 1952-1960 seasons. He won the 1960 Indianapolis 500, and he also competed in the two "Race of Two Worlds" events in Monza, Italy, winning the 1958 race. Rathmann was inducted into the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America on August 15, 2007, in Detroit.
The mercurial James Hunt was a tremendously talented driver who pushed norms and rattled the establishment every chance he got, and his memorable pairing with Lord Hesketh and the Hesketh Racing Team in the beginning of his F1 career remains one of the most colorful chapters in the sport. Hunt was immortalized in the Ron Howard-directed film Rush from 2013, which chronicled Hunt's titanic battle with his rival Niki Lauda during the 1976 F1 season, in which Hunt won the World Championship driving for McLaren. It would be Hunt's only World Championship, as his career faded after that. James died of a heart attack on June 15, 1993, at the young age of 45.
(Photo by Dave Friedman)
Michael Andretti had to live with the enduring legend of his father, Mario, which loomed over his own driving career, but he delivered a spectacular career of his own. Michael competed in 317 Indy car races, winning 42 times. He started from 32 pole positions and won the CART Championship in 1991, although he never won the Indy 500 after dominating many races - and leading the most laps in Indy 500 history - at the Speedway. Michael's foray into F1 in 1993 with Team McLaren - as a teammate to Ayrton Senna - was fraught with problems, and his best finish was a third at Monza, before returning home to the U.S. to race in CART. Michael has gone on to lead Andretti Autosport, which is one of the most successful racing teams in IndyCar.
(Photo by Dave Friedman)