Mark Donohue
Mark Donohue
B Skill 144th
Elo

27.915

Number of Races

15

Number of Wins

0

Number of Podiums

1

Peak Elo

28.221

Time Spent Driving

3h57m37.982s


Mark Neary Donohue Jr. (March 18, 1937 – August 19, 1975), nicknamed "Captain Nice," and later "Dark Monohue," was an American racecar driver known for his ability to set up his own race car as well as driving it to victories.Donohue is probably best known as the driver of the 1500+ bhp "Can-Am Killer" Porsche 917-30 and as the winner of the Indianapolis 500 in 1972. Cars that Donohue raced include: AMC Javelin, AMC Matador, Chevrolet Camaro, Eagle-Offy, Elva Courier, Ford GT40 MK IV, Ferrari 250LM, Ferrari 512, Lola T70, Lola T330, Lotus 20, McLaren M16, Porsche 911, Porsche 917/10, Porsche 917/30, Shelby Cobra, and Shelby Mustang GT350R.

Early life

Born in Haddon Township, New Jersey, Donohue grew up in Summit, graduated from the Pingry School in Hillside, and entered Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. At the age of twenty-two, while a senior at Brown, Donohue began racing his 1957 Corvette. He won the first event he entered, a hillclimb in Belknap County, New Hampshire. He graduated from Brown in 1959 with a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering.Donohue won the SCCA national championship in an Elva Courier in 1961. An experienced race driver named Walt Hansgen (who worked for Inskip Motors in NY & RI) recognized Donohue's ability and befriended him, eventually providing an MGB (through Inskip Motors in Providence, RI and prepped by their race shop Competition Engineering) for Donohue to race at the 1964 Bridgehampton 500-mile (800 km) SCCA endurance event, which he won. Hansgen arranged for Donohue to become his teammate in 1965, co-driving a Ferrari 275 at the 12 Hours of Sebring endurance race, which they finished in 11th place. That year, Donohue also won two divisional championships: in SCCA B Class in a GT350 and in SCCA Formula C in a Lotus 20B.Donohue was hired on March 29, 1964 by Jack Griffith [Griffith Motors, Syosset, N.Y./Plainview, N.Y.] as design engineer for the Griffith, formerly TVR Grantura Mk III, powered by a Ford 289 cid (4.7l) V8 engine. He went on to assist TVR's David Hives in designing the Series 400 Griffith and then working on the ill-fated Bob Cumberford-designed, Intermeccanica-(Torino, Italy) produced Series 600 Griffith.
Read more on Wikipedia

Recent Events

f1-1975 Race at A1-Ring
17 Aug 75 00:00 UTC
  • Position: 27th of 30
  • Points: 0
  • Skill Change: -0.162
  • Car: March-1975
  • Best Lap: 0s
  • Race Time: 0s
f1-1975 Race at Nürburgring
03 Aug 75 00:00 UTC
  • Position: 23rd of 26
  • Points: 0
  • Skill Change: -0.144
  • Car: March-1975
  • Best Lap: 0s
  • Race Time: 0s
f1-1975 Race at Silverstone Circuit
19 Jul 75 00:00 UTC
  • Position: 5th of 28
  • Points: 2
  • Skill Change: 0.191
  • Car: March-1975
  • Best Lap: 0s
  • Race Time: 0s
f1-1975 Race at Circuit Paul Ricard
06 Jul 75 00:00 UTC
  • Position: 24th of 26
  • Points: 0
  • Skill Change: -0.184
  • Car: Penske-1975
  • Best Lap: 0s
  • Race Time: 0s
f1-1975 Race at Circuit Park Zandvoort
22 Jun 75 00:00 UTC
  • Position: 8th of 25
  • Points: 0
  • Skill Change: 0.120
  • Car: Penske-1975
  • Best Lap: 0s
  • Race Time: 0s