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John Buffum
John "JB" is the most successful U.S. Rally driver ever. Winning eleven national titles and 115 victories. As the owner of Libra Racing, he has managed and prepared vehicles for some of the best competitors in this country. From 1988-1992 he served as the SCCA National PRO Rally Series Manager and became the President of the American Rally Association from 1994-1995. Now car owner of '97 champion Hyundai Tiburon In 1964, when a fraternity brother at Middlebury College convinced John Buffum to navigate a time-speed-distance rally with him in a borrowed MGA, the most famous rally career in U.S. motorsports was born. Buffum picked up a 10th in the 1966 Press on Regardless event in a Mini-Cooper. In 1967, Buffum co-drove for Tim Gold - also in a Mini - to a win in the New England Winter Rally. After graduating from college and enlisting in the Army as a mechanical engineer, Buffum was sent to Germany as a second lieutenant in a bridge-building company of the Corps of Engineers. It was there that he saw all-out, World Rallying for the first time, and bought a Porsche 911T to compete in both regional and international rallies. In 1969, he drove to a 12th place finish at Monte Carlo, sharing the driving chores with American road racer Steve "Yogi" Behr. The sport of PRO Rally did not exist in the U.S. when Buffum returned from Europe in 1970, and since the speed sensation he had experienced in Europe did not exist in TSD events, Buffum tried his hand at IMSA and SCCA road racing. Buffum formed his own racing company - Libra Racing - and competed both in a Mini Cooper and an English Ford Escort. He shared the driving cockpit with the likes of George Follmer, Steve Behr and Brett Lunger -and had some top 10 finishes in a BMW CSL, but didn't have the budget (or the right car - which was a Porsche Carrera RSR at the time) to crack the winner's circle. By the mid-70's, performance rallying was taking roots in the U.S., and, despite the fact that John and Vicki divorced in 1974, they stayed together as a rally team. They started together in a Porsche in 1975, but it was 1976 that proved to be the pivotal year. The pair won two U.S. rallies and a Canadian event, sweeping to the NARRA national championship, and being edged out of the SCCA championship by Hendrik Blok/Erick Hauge. It was during this period when Buffum's driving style started to mature, as he went from the reckless mode which earned him the nickname "Stuff 'em Buffum," to his championship mode. Buffum became known for his ability to take charge of the ever-changing conditions of a rally course, his photographic memory of roads and turns, and his ability to drive with abandon to post the fastest time, but with enough competition sense to finish the event. For four years starting in 1977, Buffum drove factory Triumph TR-7s and TR-8s, and picked up Doug Shepherd as a co-driver. The pair dominated both the SCCA PRO Rally series and the North America Rally Championship until British Leyland dropped out of racing in the U.S. In 1981, they tried running Audi 80 and Peugeot 504 racers, but could not keep up with Rod Millen's factory Mazda RX-7 rally entries. In 1982, however, when Audi supplied Buffum and Shepherd with its new Audi Quattro racers, they were unstoppable. Millen would get a faster RX-7, and Buffum would counter with Quattro A2, then a Sport Quattro and up the ante again. He would also rally occasionally in Europe, where, in 1983, he became the first and only American to win a European Championship event (1983 Sachs Rally in Germany and the 1984 ERC event in Cyprus). With Doug Shepherd moving into a factory driver's role with Dodge, Buffum hired veteran co-driver Tom Grimshaw, and the pair won back-to-back-to-back championships, including their 1987 undefeated season. During this period, Buffum became the most winning performance rallying driver ever worldwide, with his 104 national championship wins far surpassing anyone else. He retired after that year, and became SCCA PRO Rally series manager, helping the sport maintain its stature through some lean years. He still drives an occasional rally, however, having won several Canadian events and subbing (and winning) the Wild West PRO Rally in Olympia, Wash. In 1993 when regular driver (and stepson) Paul Choiniere couldn't make it to the event. He also subbed and won for Choiniere at the '94 Lake Superior PRO Rally. Buffum and veteran co-driver Mark Williams shaved more than two hours off the record while winning the Rally of Incas in Peru - in Choiniere's old Audi S-2 - in September 1995. Choiniere, who became part of Buffum's family when his mother, Mary, married John in 1980, has won the SCCA PRO Rally series seven times in Buffum-prepared Audi Quattro S-2, Hyundai Elantra, and Hyundai Tiburon vehicles. Buffum is a car builder and preparer (for Choiniere's new Hyundai Tiburon
Open class rally car) as well as the past-president of the American Rally
Association, which handled the field administration and rules for the SCCA/Michelin
PRO Rally series for 1994 and 1995. | John Buffum Ontario, Canada Minnesota Monte Carlo |