Top 100
David McKay
This bio has been viewed 243 times
David
McKay
Born
14/5/1921
89 years ago.
Died
26/11/2004
6 years ago, aged 83

The son of Sir Malcolm McKay, David McKay was born in 1921.

Started racing in an MG-TC and also raced Dick Cobden TC Special and raced it with gusto, proving it to be the fastest unsupercharged TC Special in the country.

He went to Europe in 1955 and bought an Aston as part of the Kangaroo Stable and his racing escalated through the late fifties. Prying money from Ampol and Victa Industries (manufacturers of lawnmowers), he had a Jaguar sedan and a Cooper Climax by 1960 and won the Australian Touring Car Championship that year.

In 1961, after buying Ron Flockhart's Cooper 2.5, he went to the brand new Mallala circuit in South Australia hoping to win the Australian Grand Prix.

He didn't fare all that well in practice but he was on the front row. And he took advantage of the car's well known potential for launching itself off the grid to take the lead and hold it.

But his start was so good that officials decided he must have jumped the start, and so they put a one minute penalty on him and so his great drive to stay ahead of Lex Davison went unrewarded.

Scuderia Veloce was his team, and as he raced in his final couple of years as a driver, and when he retired to become team manager, it was a team always at the forefront in the sport.

He was able to attract enough sponsorship to run first rate cars, getting a Brabham BT4 for himself in 1963 in a final effort to pin down Bib Stillwell in his pursuit of that Gold Star he desperately wanted to take away from the Victorian car dealer. David retired after the last race that series without having taken the title. He later reckoned that he'd retired too early.

Graham Hill was invited to drive for him in 1964 in the first Tasman Cup series, taking victory at Longford, but the car then went into the hands of Spencer Martin for the Gold Star series. Spencer was crewing on the car for Hill along with head mechanic Bob Atkin, and McKay saw it all as a good grounding for his young protege to be totally involved.

The Scuderia had other drivers. Most owned their own cars, some drove David's. Like the Lola sports car that looked so lovely in 1960 and didn't lose any lustre when Greg Cusack drove it. Touring cars were there too, Norm Beechey for a time with his old Holden, then Brian Muir with his S4.

In 1965, the year that David expected Martin's apprenticeship of 1964 should have paid dividends against the aging Bib Stillwell, there was a brand new Brabham BT11 and a Ferrari 250LM as well.

After Hill's running the car through the Tasman, Martin got into it for the Gold Star and chased Bib all year. But all was not well in the team, and after 1966 got underway, Spencer pulled up stakes and quit the team. It was a huge surprise in motor racing circles, and with Shell determined that they should be in pursuit of the Gold Star that had been BP's virtually since its inception, they had to make sure their driver remained in the hunt.

They quickly arranged for Spencer to move to Melbourne and take up a post working and driving for the Bob Jane organisation. While David tried to press on with Jim Palmer (who couldn't get an Australian licence because of his monocular vision), Scuderia Veloce had to bow out of the race and Spencer finally took the title from a fresh field of newcomers like Geoghegan, Cusack and Bartlett by consistently putting his very reliable Bob Jane Brabham well up in the placings. David did put Jackie Stewart into his Brabham for a one-off race at the Surfers Paradise meeting.

Despite Spencer's departure, SV did win the 12-hour race at Surfers, and did it two years in a row. David had actually donned the racing gloves and hat again in 1965 to co-drive the 275LM to victory at Caversham's 6-hour.

A couple or three outings in the October Bathurst endurance race in Ford GT HOs saw him in the thick of it, though some people wondered a few years later when he ran a Volvo 242GT on radial tyres.

But David's influence on racing was waning as he cut back his writing and headed for semi-retirement. He ran a gallery of some kind in Sydney's eastern suburbs, left his wife and married a younger woman. She complained about having to go to Monaco every year at GP time, however, so she also found herself unwanted. David finished his days with a lovely Swiss schoolteacher who joined him at his family estate at Exeter on the NSW Southern Highlands.



With thanks to Ray Bell


If you would like to make any comments, additions or corrections to this short bio please enter them in the form below
Please enter the text above in this box.
Your email address.
Share this biography on facebookShare
  • next 100
  • previous 100
  • skip to last page
  • back to start


    These are the top 100 drivers by views this year. To view the top 100 drivers today, click here.

    Click on the drivers name for more information.
    Last Year
    Name
    Views
    Today
    Total
    Views
    2372
    2394
    0
    243
    2373
    1266
    0
    243
    2374
    -
    0
    243
    2375
    105
    0
    243
    2376
    2432
    0
    243
    2377
    2021
    0
    243
    2378
    2093
    0
    243
    2379
    315
    0
    243
    2380
    -
    0
    243
    2381
    463
    0
    243
    2382
    1082
    0
    243
    2383
    327
    0
    243
    2384
    2020
    0
    243
    2385
    -
    0
    243
    2386
    1144
    0
    243
    2387
    58
    0
    243
    2388
    798
    0
    243
    2389
    470
    0
    243
    2390
    211
    0
    243
    2391
    2208
    0
    243
    2392
    2054
    0
    243
    2393
    233
    0
    243
    2394
    1982
    0
    243
    2395
    303
    0
    243
    2396
    830
    0
    243
    2397
    1889
    0
    243
    2398
    1608
    0
    242
    2399
    1917
    0
    242
    2400
    441
    0
    242
    2401
    -
    0
    242
    2402
    216
    0
    242
    2403
    1944
    0
    242
    2404
    498
    0
    242
    2405
    -
    0
    242
    2406
    922
    0
    242
    2407
    1407
    0
    242
    2408
    1759
    0
    242
    2409
    1555
    0
    242
    2410
    1374
    0
    242
    2411
    2106
    0
    242
    2412
    984
    0
    242
    2413
    2129
    0
    242
    2414
    2293
    0
    242
    2415
    -
    0
    242
    2416
    1141
    0
    242
    2417
    1090
    0
    242
    2418
    2221
    0
    242
    2419
    351
    0
    242
    2420
    1373
    0
    242
    2421
    1692
    0
    242
    2422
    1761
    0
    242
    2423
    1990
    0
    242
    2424
    2236
    0
    242
    2425
    2297
    0
    242
    2426
    1890
    0
    242
    2427
    2018
    0
    242
    2428
    1813
    0
    242
    2429
    -
    0
    242
    2430
    -
    0
    242
    2431
    854
    0
    242
    2432
    -
    0
    242
    2433
    618
    0
    242
    2434
    -
    0
    242
    2435
    -
    0
    242
    2436
    1218
    0
    241
    2437
    2342
    0
    241
    2438
    1123
    0
    241
    2439
    1877
    0
    241
    2440
    -
    0
    241
    2441
    595
    0
    241
    2442
    2136
    0
    241
    2443
    1166
    0
    241
    2444
    293
    0
    241
    2445
    1701
    0
    241
    2446
    -
    0
    241
    2447
    -
    0
    241
    2448
    -
    0
    241
    2449
    439
    0
    241
    2450
    531
    0
    241
    2451
    1951
    0
    241
    2452
    635
    0
    241
    2453
    -
    0
    241
    2454
    684
    0
    241
    2455
    1559
    0
    241
    2456
    -
    0
    241
    2457
    319
    0
    241
    2458
    753
    0
    241
    2459
    -
    0
    241
    2460
    1666
    0
    241
    2461
    1732
    0
    241
    2462
    -
    0
    240
    2463
    565
    0
    240
    2464
    -
    0
    240
    2465
    1970
    0
    240
    2466
    -
    0
    240
    2467
    -
    0
    240
    2468
    1538
    0
    240
    2469
    973
    0
    240
    2470
    -
    0
    240
    2471
    -
    0
    240