Jack Brabham

{{short description|Australian racing driver and motorsport executive (1926–2014)}}

{{for|the Triffids album|Jack Brabham (album){{!}}Jack Brabham (album)}}

{{Use Australian English|date=April 2012}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2020}}

{{Infobox person

| honorific_prefix = Sir

| name = Jack Brabham

| honorific_suffix = {{postnom|country=AUS|size=100%|AO|OBE}}

| image = BrabhamJack1966B.jpg

| caption = Brabham in 1966

| birth_name = John Arthur Brabham

| birth_date = {{birth date|df=y|1926|4|2}}

| birth_place = Hurstville, New South Wales, Australia

| death_date = {{death date and age|df=y|2014|5|19|1926|4|2}}

| death_place = Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia

| spouse = {{plainlist|

  • {{marriage|Betty Beresford|1951|1994|end=div}}
  • {{marriage|Margaret Taylor|1995}}

}}

| children = {{hlist|Geoff|Gary|David}}

| relatives = {{plainlist|

}}

| module = {{Infobox F1 driver|embed=yes

| nationality = {{flagicon|AUS}} Australian

| Years = {{F1|1955}}–{{F1|1970}}

| Team(s) = Cooper, privateer Maserati, Walker, Brabham

| Races = 128 (126 starts)

| Championships = 3 ({{F1|1959}}, {{F1|1960}}, {{F1|1966}})

| Wins = 14

| Podiums = 31

| Points = 253 (261){{efn|name="droppedpoints"}}

| Poles = 13

| Fastest laps = 12

| First race = 1955 British Grand Prix

| First win = 1959 Monaco Grand Prix

| Last win = 1970 South African Grand Prix

| Last race = 1970 Mexican Grand Prix

}}

}}

Sir John Arthur Brabham (2 April 1926 – 19 May 2014) was an Australian racing driver and motorsport executive, who competed in Formula One from {{F1|1955}} to {{F1|1970}}. Brabham won three Formula One World Drivers' Championship titles, which he won in {{F1|1959}}, {{F1|1960}} and {{F1|1966}}, and won 14 Grands Prix across 16 seasons. He co-founded Brabham in 1960, leading the team to two World Constructors' Championship titles, and remains the only driver to have won the World Drivers' Championship in an eponymous car.

Brabham was a Royal Australian Air Force flight mechanic and ran a small engineering workshop before he started racing midget cars in 1948. His successes with midgets in Australian and New Zealand road racing events led to his going to Britain to further his racing career. There he became part of the Cooper Car Company's racing team, building as well as racing cars. He contributed to the design of the mid-engined cars that Cooper introduced to Formula One and the Indianapolis 500, and won the Formula One world championship in 1959 and 1960. In 1962 he established his own Brabham marque with fellow Australian Ron Tauranac, which in the 1960s became the largest manufacturer of custom racing cars in the world. In the 1966 Formula One season Brabham became the only man to win the Formula One world championship driving one of his own cars. At the time of his death, he was the last surviving World Champion of the 1950s.

After the 1970 Formula One season, Brabham retired to Australia, where he bought a farm and maintained business interests, which included the Engine Developments racing engine manufacturer and several garages.{{cite news|url=http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/108087|title=Jose Froilan Gonzalez, Ferrari's first F1 winner, dies aged 90|work=Autosport|date=15 June 2013|access-date=15 June 2013|archive-date=20 March 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170320072038/http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/108087|url-status=live}}

Early life

John Arthur 'Jack' Brabham was born on 2 April 1926 in Hurstville, New South Wales, then a commuter town outside Sydney. Brabham was involved with cars and mechanics from an early age. At the age of 12, he learned to drive the family car and the trucks of his father's grocery business. Brabham attended technical college, studying metalwork, carpentry, and technical drawing.Brabham, Nye (2004) pp.20–21

Brabham's early career continued the engineering theme. At the age of 15 he left school to work, combining a job at a local garage with an evening course in mechanical engineering. Brabham soon branched out into his own business selling motorbikes, which he bought and repaired for sale, using his parents' back veranda as his workshop.Brabham, Nye (2004) pp.21–22

One month after his 18th birthday on 19 May 1944 Brabham enlisted into the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF). Although he was keen on becoming a pilot, there was already a surplus of trained aircrew and the Air Force instead put his mechanical skills to use as a flight mechanic, of which there was a wartime shortage. He was based at RAAF Station Williamtown, where he maintained Bristol Beaufighters at No. 5 Operational Training Unit. On his 20th birthday, 2 April 1946, Brabham was discharged from the RAAF with the rank of leading aircraftman. He then started a small service, repair, and machining business in a workshop built by his uncle on a plot of land behind his grandfather's house.Brabham, Nye (2004) p.26

Racing career

=Australia=

File:AJ Foyt dirt car 1961.jpg

Brabham started racing after an American friend, Johnny Schonberg, persuaded him to watch a midget car race. Midget racing was a category for small open-wheel cars racing on dirt ovals. It was popular in Australia, attracting crowds of up to 40,000. Brabham records that he was not taken with the idea of driving, being convinced that the drivers "were all lunatics" but he agreed to build a car with Schonberg.

At first Schonberg drove the homemade device, powered by a modified JAP motorcycle engine built by Brabham in his workshop. In 1948, Schonberg's wife persuaded him to stop racing and on his suggestion Brabham took over. He almost immediately found that he had a knack for the sport, winning on his third night's racing. From there he was a regular competitor and winner in Midgets (known as Speedcars in Australia) at tracks such Sydney's Cumberland Speedway, the Sydney Showground, and the Sydney Sports Ground, as well as interstate tracks such as Adelaide's Kilburn and Rowley Park speedways and the Ekka in Brisbane. Brabham has since said that it was "terrific driver training. You had to have quick reflexes: in effect you lived—or possibly died—on them."Brabham, Nye (2004) p.33 Due to the time required to prepare the car, the sport also became his living. Brabham won the 1948 Australian Speedcar Championship, the 1949 Australian and South Australian Speedcar championships, and the 1950–1951 Australian championship with the car.Unique (pp.30–31) "Jack Brabham potential world champion..." Article reproduced from a 1958 edition of Australian Motor Sport.

After successfully running the midget at some hillclimbing events in 1951, Brabham became interested in road racing. He bought and modified a series of racing cars from the Cooper Car Company, a British constructor, and from 1953 concentrated on this form of racing, in which drivers compete on closed tarmac circuits. He was supported by his father and by the Redex fuel additive company, although his commercially aware approach—including the title RedeX Special painted on the side of his Cooper-Bristol—did not go down well with the Confederation of Australian Motor Sport (CAMS), which banned the advertisement.Brabham, Nye (2004) pp.35–37 Brabham competed in Australia and New Zealand until early 1955, taking "a long succession of victories", including the 1953 Queensland Road Racing championship. During this time, he picked up the nickname "Black Jack", which has been variously attributed to his dark hair and stubble, to his "ruthless" approach on the track,Drackett (1986) pp.13–15 and to his "propensity for maintaining a shadowy silence".{{cite web|last=Donaldson |first=Gerald |title=Jack Brabham |url=http://www.formula1.com/teams_and_drivers/hall_of_fame/133/ |publisher=Formula One Administration Ltd. |access-date=30 October 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100712083043/http://www.formula1.com/teams_and_drivers/hall_of_fame/133/ |archive-date=12 July 2010 }} After the 1954 New Zealand Grand Prix, Brabham was persuaded by Dean Delamont, competitions manager of the Royal Automobile Club in the United Kingdom, to try a season of racing in Europe, then the international centre of road racing.Brabham, Nye (2004) pp.44–45

=Europe=

==Cooper==

File:Cooper T51 rear Donington.jpg

Upon arriving in Europe on his own in early 1955, Brabham based himself in the UK, where he bought another Cooper to race in national events. His crowd-pleasing driving style initially betrayed his dirt track origins: as he put it, he took corners "by using full [steering] lock and lots of throttle".Unique p.58 "Jack Brabham" 1959 Visits to the Cooper factory for parts led to a friendship with Charlie and John Cooper, who told the story that after many requests for a drive with the factory team, Brabham was given the keys to the transporter taking the cars to a race.Dracket (1985) p.16 Brabham soon "seemed to merge into Cooper Cars":Lawrence (1989) p.80 he was not an employee, but he started working at Cooper daily from the midpoint of the 1955 season building a Bobtail mid-engined sports car, intended for Formula One, the top category of single seater racing.{{efn|Formula One rules did not at that time prevent the use of cars with enclosed wheels.}} He made his Grand Prix debut at the age of 29 driving the car at the 1955 British Grand Prix. It had a 2-litre engine, half a litre less than permitted, and ran slowly with a broken clutch before retiring.Brabham, Nye (2004) pp.54–56 Later in the year Brabham, again driving the Bobtail, tussled with Stirling Moss for third place in a non-championship Formula One race at Snetterton. Although Moss finished ahead, Brabham saw the race as a turning point, proving that he could compete at this level. He shipped the Bobtail back to Australia, where he used it to win the 1955 Australian Grand Prix before selling it to help fund a permanent move to the UK the following year with his wife Betty and their son Geoff.Brabham, Nye (2004) pp.56–57

Brabham briefly and unsuccessfully campaigned his own second hand Formula One Maserati 250F during 1956, but his season was saved by drives for Cooper in sports cars and Formula Two, the junior category to Formula One.Brabham, Nye (2004) p.59 At that time, almost all racing cars had their engines mounted at the front but Coopers were different, having the engine placed behind the driver, which improved their handling. In 1957, Brabham drove another mid-engined Cooper, again only fitted with a 2-litre engine, at the Monaco Grand Prix. He avoided a large crash at the first corner and was running third towards the end of the race when the fuel pump mount failed. After more than three hours of racing, the exhausted Brabham, who "hated to be beaten",Brabham, Nye (2004) p.61 pushed the car to the line to finish sixth.Unique Jack Brabham – Star from Down Under p.27 reproduced from Sports Car Illustrated 1959 The following year, he was Autocar Formula Two champion in a Cooper, while continuing to score minor points-scoring positions with the small-engined Coopers in the World Drivers' Championship and driving for Aston Martin in Sportscars. His schedule necessitated a considerable amount of travel on the roads of Europe. Brabham's driving on public roads was described as "safe as houses",Unique p.111, a reproduction of the profile 'Deeds, not words' by Alan Brinton (1966) unlike many of his contemporaries—on the way back from the 1957 Pescara Grand Prix, passenger Tony Brooks took over driving after Brabham refused to overtake a long line of lorries. In late 1958, Brabham rekindled his interest in flying and began taking lessons. He bought his own plane and on gaining his licence began to make heavy use of it piloting himself, his family, and members of his team around Europe to races.Brabham (1971) pp.98—117

In 1959, Cooper obtained 2.5-litre engines for the first time and Brabham put the extra power to good use by winning his first world championship race at the season-opening Monaco Grand Prix after Jean Behra's Ferrari and Stirling Moss's Cooper failed.Rendall (2007) pp.215–216 More podium places were followed by a win in the British Grand Prix at Aintree after Brabham preserved his tyres to the end of the race, enabling him to finish ahead of Moss who had to pit to replace worn tyres.Brabham, Nye (2004) p.85 This gave him a 13-point championship lead with four races to go. At the Portuguese Grand Prix at Monsanto Park, Brabham was chasing race leader Moss when a backmarker moved over on him and launched the Cooper into the air. The airborne car hit a telegraph pole, throwing Brabham onto the track, where he narrowly avoided being hit by one of his teammates but escaped with no serious injury.Straw, Edd (7 May 2009 ) "Jack of All Trades" Autosport With two wins each, Brabham, Moss, and Ferrari's Tony Brooks were all capable of winning the championship at the final event of the season, the United States Grand Prix at Sebring. Brabham was among those up until 1 am the morning before the race working on the Cooper team cars. The next day, after pacing himself behind Moss, who soon retired with a broken gearbox, he led almost to the end of the race before running out of fuel on the last lap. He again pushed the car to the finish line to place fourth, although in the event this was unnecessary as his other title rival, Brooks, finished only third.Brabham, Nye (2004) pp.89–97 His championship-winning margin over Brooks was four points. According to Gerald Donaldson, "some thought [his title] owed more to stealth than skill, an opinion at least partly based on Brabham's low-key presence."

Despite his success with Cooper, Brabham was sure he could do better. He considered buying Cooper in partnership with Roy Salvadori and then in late 1959 he asked his friend Ron Tauranac to come to the UK and work with him, producing upgrade kits for Sunbeam Rapier and Triumph Herald road cars at his car dealership, Jack Brabham Motors, but with the long-term aim of designing racing cars.Lawrence (1999) p. 22-4 & Henry (1985) p.19 Brabham continued to drive for Cooper, but on the long flight back from the 1960 season-opening Argentine Grand Prix, he had a heart-to-heart with John Cooper. John's father Charlie and the designer Owen Maddock had been reluctant to update their car, but although a Cooper had won in Argentina, other cars had been faster before they broke down.Brabham, Nye (2005) pp.112–113 Brabham helped design the more advanced Cooper T53, including advice from Tauranac.Lawrence (1999) pp.11–12 Brabham spun the new car out of the next championship race, the Monaco Grand Prix, but then embarked on a series of five straight victories. He won from the front at the Dutch, French, and Belgian Grands Prix, where title rival Moss was badly injured in a practice accident that put him out for two months. Two other drivers were killed during the race. At the British Grand Prix, Brabham was closing on Graham Hill's BRM before Hill spun off, leaving Brabham the victory. He then came back from eighth place to second at the Portuguese Grand Prix after sliding off on tramlines and won after race leader John Surtees crashed. Brabham's points total was put out of reach when the British teams withdrew from the Italian GP on safety grounds.Brabham, Nye (2005) pp.115–121 Mike Lawrence writes that Brabham's expertise in setting up the cars was a significant factor in Cooper's 1960 drivers' and constructors' titles.Lawrence (1998) p.86

Coventry Climax were late in producing the smaller 1.5-litre engine required for the 1961 season and the Cooper-Climaxes were outclassed by new mid-engined cars from Porsche, Lotus, and championship-winners Ferrari.Lawrence (1998) p.87 Brabham scored only three points and finished 11th in the championship. He had a little more success in the non-championship Formula One races, where he ran his own private Coopers and took three victories at Snetterton (26 March), Brussels (9 April), and Aintree (22 April).

The same year, Brabham entered the famous Indianapolis 500 oval race for the first time in a modified version of the Formula One Cooper. It had a 2.7-litre Climax engine producing {{Convert|268|bhp|kW PS|0|abbr=on}} compared to the 4.4-litre, {{Convert|430|bhp|kW PS|0|abbr=on}} Offenhauser engines used by the front-engined roadsters driven by all the other entrants. Jack qualified a respectable 17th at 145.144 mp/h (pole winner Eddie Sachs qualified at 147.481 mp/h), and while the front-engined roadsters were much faster on the long front and back straights, the rear-engined Cooper's superior handling through the turns and the shorter north and south sections kept the reigning World Champion competitive. Brabham ran as high as third before finishing ninth, completing all 200 laps. Although most of the doubters in the American Indycar scene claimed that rear-engine cars were for drivers who like to be pushed around, as Brabham put it, it "triggered the rear-engined revolution at Indy" and within five years most of the cars that raced at Indianapolis would be rear-engined.Brabham, Nye (2004)pp.133–136

==Brabham==

File:BrabhamJack19650801Südkehre.jpg at the Nürburgring.]]

File:Brabham at 1966 Dutch Grand Prix (5).jpg at Zandvoort.]]

File:2005 Goodwood Festival of Speed F2 Brabham BT18 Honda.jpg in 1966]]

File:Brabham at 1966 Dutch Grand Prix.jpg at Zandvoort.]]

File:1970 Brands Hatch Race of Champions Jack Brabham BT33.jpg at the 1970 Race of Champions at Brands Hatch.]]

Brabham and Tauranac set up a company called Motor Racing Developments (MRD), which produced customer racing cars, while Brabham himself continued to race for Cooper. MRD produced cars for Formula Junior, with the first one appearing in mid-1961. Brabham left Cooper in 1962 to drive for his own team: the Brabham Racing Organisation, using cars built by Motor Racing Developments.Lawrence (1999) p. 31{{efn|Brabham, Nye (2004) pp. 14, 145–9 Brabham's and Tauranac's (Lawrence 1999 p. 32) accounts differ on whether the BRO was formed for the purpose of F1, or was already in existence.}} A newly introduced engine limit in Formula One of 1500 cc did not suit Brabham and he did not win a single race with a 1500 cc car.Cooper, Adam (May 1999) "The world according to Jack" Motorsport p. 36 The article quotes Jack as saying "There's no way you could call those 1500-cc machines Formula One." His team suffered poor reliability during this period and motorsport authors Mike Lawrence and David Hodges have said that Brabham's reluctance to spend money may have cost the team results, a view echoed by Tauranac.{{efn|Tauranac says (Lawrence (1999) p.48) that he feels a third mechanic would have reduced the reliability problems. Lawrence himself notes (Lawrence (1999) p.71) that 'If only Jack had been prepared to spend a little more money, the results could have been so much better'. Hodges (1990, p.32) notes, 'Economy was a watchword. ...It was this attitude, perhaps, which cost [Brabham] some races'.}} During the 1965 season, Brabham started to consider retirement to manage his team. Dan Gurney, who had taken the team's first championship race win the previous year, took the lead driver role while Brabham gave up his car to several other drivers towards the end of the season. At the end of the season, Gurney announced his intention to leave and set up his own team and Brabham decided to carry on.Lawrence (1999) pp.70–71

In 1966, a new 3-litre formula was created for Formula One. The new engines under development by other suppliers all had at least 12 cylinders and proved difficult to develop, being heavy and unreliable. Brabham took a different approach to the problem of obtaining a suitable engine: he persuaded Australian engineering company Repco to develop a new 3-litre eight-cylinder engine for him.Henry (1985) p. 53 Repco had no experience in designing complete engines. Brabham had identified a supply of suitable engine blocks obtained from Oldsmobile's aluminium alloy 215 engine and persuaded the company that an engine could be designed around the block, largely using existing components. Brabham and Repco were aware that the engine would not compete in terms of outright power, but felt that a lightweight, reliable engine could achieve good championship results while other teams were still making their new designs reliable.

The combination of the Repco engine, designed by Phil Irving, and the Brabham BT19 chassis designed by Tauranac worked. At the French Grand Prix at Reims-Gueux, Jack Brabham took his first Formula One world championship win since 1960 and became the first man to win such a race in a car of his own construction. Only his two former teammates, Bruce McLaren and Dan Gurney, have since matched this achievement. It was the first in a run of four straight wins for the Australian veteran. The 40-year-old Brabham was annoyed by press stories about his age and, in a highly uncharacteristic stunt, at the Dutch Grand Prix he hobbled to his car on the starting grid before the race wearing a long false beard and leaning on a cane before going on to win the race.Henry (1985) pp.61–62 Brabham confirmed his third championship at the Italian Grand Prix and became the only driver to win the Formula One World Championship in a car that carried his own name.

The season also saw the fruition of Brabham's relationship with Japanese engine manufacturer Honda in Formula Two. After a generally unsuccessful season in 1965, Honda revised their 1-litre engine completely. Brabham won ten of the year's 16 European Formula Two races in his Brabham-Honda. There was no European Formula Two championship that year, but Brabham won the Trophées de France, a championship consisting of six of the French Formula Two races.Lawrence (1999) p.221

In 1967, the Formula One title went to Brabham's teammate Denny Hulme. Hulme had better reliability through the year, possibly due to Brabham's desire to try new parts first.Lawrence (1999) p.92 Hulme, Tauranac, and Frank Hallam, Repco-Brabham's chief engineer, all shared this view.

Despite taking pole position in the first two rounds, mechanical problems halted his chances of victory. He spun numerous times in South Africa, and at Monaco, his engine blew up at the start, and the win went to his teammate Denny Hulme. At the Dutch Grand Prix, he scored his first podium of the season, with second place, behind Scotsman Jim Clark. He retired in the Belgian Grand Prix with another blown engine. He fixed this by winning the French Grand Prix at the Bugatti Circuit in Le Mans. He came fourth at the British Grand Prix, behind Chris Amon, his teammate Hulme, and Clark. At the German Grand Prix, he had a huge battle with Amon, and Brabham eventually finished ahead of the New Zealander, by only half a second. Hulme was the winner. At the first ever Canadian Grand Prix at Mosport Park, he took a huge win, ahead of Hulme, in cold and rainy conditions. At the Italian Grand Prix at Monza, Brabham had to finish second, only a few car lengths behind John Surtees, who took his last GP win. Hulme retired from the race, cutting the gap to 3 points between the two, as the circus headed for the United States, at Watkins Glen for the United States Grand Prix. Brabham outqualified his teammate, and finished fifth in the race, and with Hulme on the podium, this meant the championship chances were looking slim for Black Jack, as the circus went to Mexico for the championship deciding and final race of the season. Once again, he outqualified his teammate, and needed to win, with Hulme fifth or lower. But Jim Clark was simply too fast during the whole weekend, and dominated the race from pole to win, with Brabham finishing over 1 minute and 25 seconds behind. Hulme finished third, and so the New Zealander won the championship, while Brabham settled for second place. The team secured the Constructors' Championship, with 67 total points scored, and 23 points ahead of Lotus which scored a total of 44 points.

Brabham raced alongside his teammate Jochen Rindt during the 1968 season. It wasn't a good season for him. He retired from the first seven races, before scoring two points for fifth place at the German Grand Prix. He retired from the remaining four races. At the end of the year, he fulfilled a desire to fly from Britain to Australia in a small twin-engined Beechcraft Queen Air. Partway through the 1969 season, Brabham suffered serious injuries to his foot in a testing accident. He returned to racing before the end of the year, but promised his wife that he would retire after the season finished and sold his share of the team to Tauranac.

{{quote box|quote="I felt very sad, [...] I didn't feel I was giving up racing because I couldn't do the job. I felt I was just as competitive then as at any other time, and I really should have won the championship in 1970. [...] I'd have been a lot better off if I'd stayed, but sometimes family pressures don't allow you to make the decisions you'd like to."|source=The World according to Jack, Motor Sport (May 1999) p.36|width=31%|align=right}}

Finding no top drivers available despite coming close to bringing Rindt back to the team, Brabham decided to race for one more year. He began auspiciously, winning the first race of the season, the South African Grand Prix, and then led the third race, the Monaco Grand Prix until the very last turn of the last lap. Brabham was about to hold off the onrushing Rindt (the eventual 1970 F1 champion) when his front wheels locked in a skid on the sharp right turn only yards from the finish and he ended up second. While leading at the British Grand Prix at Brands Hatch, he ran out of fuel at Clearways and Rindt passed him to take the win while Brabham coasted to the finish in second place. After the 13th and final race of the season, the Mexican Grand Prix, Brabham did retire. He had tied Jackie Stewart for fifth in the points standings in the season he drove at the age of 44. Brabham also drove for the works Matra team during the 1970 World Sportscar Championship season and won the final race of the season and his final top level race at the Paris 1000 km in October that year.Brabham, Nye (2004) p.237 He then made a complete break from racing and returned to Australia, to the relief of his wife who had been "scared stiff" each time he drove.Drackett (1985) p.50

Retirement

File:Brabham Moss BT19 Goodwood Revival 2004.jpg shake hands at the 2004 Goodwood Revival meeting.]]

Following his retirement, Brabham and his family moved to a farm between Sydney and Melbourne. Brabham says that he "never really wanted"Brabham, Nye (2004) pp.250– 253 the move, but his wife Betty hoped their sons could grow up away from motorsport. As well as running the new venture, he continued his interest in businesses in the UK and Australia, including a small aviation company and garages and car dealerships. He also set up Engine Developments Ltd. in 1971 with John Judd, who had worked for Brabham on the Repco engine project in the mid 1960s. The company builds engines for racing applications.{{cite web|title=Engine Developments Ltd.|url=http://www.grandprix.com/gpe/eng-engin.html|publisher=Inside F1, Inc|access-date=4 November 2010|archive-date=30 October 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101030034027/http://grandprix.com/gpe/eng-engin.html|url-status=live}} Brabham was also a shareholder in Jack Brabham Engines Pty Ltd., an Australian company marketing Jack Brabham memorabilia.

The Brabham team continued in Formula One, winning two further Drivers' Championships in the early 1980s under Bernie Ecclestone's ownership. Although the original organisation went into administration in 1992, the name was attached to a German company selling cars and accessories in 2008, and an unsuccessful attempt to set up a new Formula One team the following year. On both occasions the Brabham family, which was unconnected to the ventures, announced its intention to take legal advice.{{cite web|title=Brabham hits out against use of his name|url=http://theage.drive.com.au/motor-news/brabham-hits-out-against-use-of-his-name-20081127-1461m.html|work=The Age|location=Australia|access-date=4 November 2010|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110706103643/http://theage.drive.com.au/motor-news/brabham-hits-out-against-use-of-his-name-20081127-1461m.html|archive-date=6 July 2011}}{{cite news|title=Family to sue new 'Brabham' F1 team|url=http://news.theage.com.au/breaking-news-sport/family-to-sue-new-brabham-f1-team-20090612-c5cl.html|work=The Age|location=Australia|access-date=4 November 2010|date=12 June 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120527131730/http://news.theage.com.au/breaking-news-sport/family-to-sue-new-brabham-f1-team-20090612-c5cl.html|archive-date=27 May 2012|url-status=dead}} In September 2014, Brabham's youngest son David announced Project Brabham, a new team planning to use a crowdsourcing business model to enter the 2015 FIA World Endurance Championship in the LMP2 category.{{cite news|url=http://www.speedcafe.com/2014/09/25/brabham-team-reborn-f1sports-cars-targetted/|title=Brabham team reborn, F1/sports cars targeted|work=Speedcafe|date=25 September 2014|access-date=25 September 2014|archive-date=26 September 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140926203615/http://www.speedcafe.com/2014/09/25/brabham-team-reborn-f1sports-cars-targetted/|url-status=dead}}

During his own retirement from international motorsport, Brabham continued to be semi-involved as both a driver in Australia, mostly racing touring cars in the famed Bathurst 1000 race, and supporting the racing ambitions of his 3 sons. His last ever international race came in December 1984 at the age of 58 in the last round of the 1984 World Sportscar Championship held at Sandown Park in Melbourne, the 1984 Sandown 1000. Jack drove as a guest driver in a Rothmans sponsored Porsche 956 co-driving with 1984 British Formula 3 champion and Scottish Aristocrat, Johnny Dumfries. The pair, driving a car with an in-car camera showing Jack up close and personal at the wheel for the first time, were not classified as finishers after only completing 108 laps. The race was Australia's first ever FISA World Championship road racing event, preceding the 1985 Australian Grand Prix in Adelaide by 11 months.

Despite his three titles, and although John Cooper considered him "the greatest",{{efn|Drackett (1985) p.17 "Of course, he turned out one of the best. In my book, taking everything into consideration, the greatest. He was a damn good driver because he used his nut. Later when Bruce McLaren joined the team, what Bruce didn't know, Jack taught him. They were both good engineers. They could set up the cars and they didn't mind getting their hands dirty and working on them."}} Formula One journalist Adam Cooper wrote in 1999 that Brabham is never listed among the Top 10 of all time, noting that "Stirling Moss and Jim Clark dominated the headlines when Jack was racing, and they still do". Brabham was the first post-war racing driver to be knighted when he received the honour in 1978 for services to motorsport.{{cite web |url=https://honours.pmc.gov.au/honours/awards/1083709 |title=It's an Honour: Knight Bachelor |publisher=Itsanhonour.gov.au |date=30 December 1978 |access-date=20 May 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190222042126/https://honours.pmc.gov.au/honours/awards/1083709 |archive-date=22 February 2019 |url-status=live }} He has received several other honours and in 2011, the suburb of Brabham in Perth, Western Australia, was named after him.[http://www.mediastatements.wa.gov.au/Pages/default.aspx?ItemId=139670& New suburb honours Australian motoring legend] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120311100811/http://www.mediastatements.wa.gov.au/Pages/default.aspx?ItemId=139670& |date=11 March 2012 }} – Media Statement- Office of the Minister for Regional Development and Lands. Published 1 May 2011. Retrieved 2 May 2011. A race circuit and an automotive training school were also named after him in the early 2010s.{{cite web|url=http://www.skynews.com.au/sport/article.aspx?id=805500&vId=3590525|archive-url=https://archive.today/20121231044534/http://www.skynews.com.au/sport/article.aspx?id=805500&vId=3590525|url-status=dead|title=Sky News: Sir Jack Brabham opens apprentice school|date=31 December 2012|archive-date=31 December 2012|website=archive.is}}

File:Brabham R230 Classic Adelaide 2002.jpeg

In retirement, Brabham continued to be involved in motorsport events, appearing at contemporary and historic motorsport events around the world where he often drove his former Cooper and Brabham cars until the early 2000s. In 1999, after competing at the Goodwood Revival at the age of 73 he commented that driving stopped him getting old.{{cite journal|last=Cooper|first=Adam|title=The world according to Jack|journal=Motor Sport|year=1999}} Despite a large accident at the 2000 Revival, the first racing accident to put him in hospital overnight, he continued to drive until at least 2004. By the late 2000s, ill-health was preventing him from driving in competition. In addition to the deafness caused by years of motor racing without adequate ear protection, his eyesight was reduced due to macular degeneration and he had kidney disease for which by 2009 he was receiving dialysis three times a week. Nonetheless, that year he attended a celebration of the 50th anniversary of his first world championship at the Phillip Island Classic festival of motorsport,{{cite web|title=When We Were Racing|url=http://www.abc.net.au/austory/content/2007/s2659460.htm|work=Australian Story|publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation|access-date=9 November 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101230092547/http://www.abc.net.au/austory/content/2007/s2659460.htm|archive-date=30 December 2010|url-status=dead}} and in 2010 flew to Bahrain with most of the other Formula One world Drivers' Champions for a celebration of 60 years of the Formula One world championship. Brabham was the oldest surviving F1 champion.{{cite news|last=Richard|first=Williams|title=Thrilling sight of those magnificent men in their timeless machines|url=https://www.theguardian.com/sport/blog/2010/mar/16/formula-one-richard-williams|work=The Guardian|access-date=9 November 2010|location=London|date=16 March 2010|archive-date=5 March 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160305221144/http://www.theguardian.com/sport/blog/2010/mar/16/formula-one-richard-williams|url-status=live}}

Brabham and Betty had three sons together: Geoff, Gary, and David. All three became involved in motorsport, with support from Brabham in their early years. Between them, they have won sportscar and single-seater races and championships. Geoff was an Indycar and sportscar racer who won five North American sportscar championships as well as the 24 Hours of Le Mans,{{cite web|last=Long|first=Gary|title=Geoff Brabham|url=http://www.mshf.com/hof/brabham_geoff.htm|publisher=Motorsports Hall of Fame of America|access-date=9 November 2010|archive-date=25 July 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110725122840/http://www.mshf.com/hof/brabham_geoff.htm|url-status=dead}} One Can-Am championship (1981), and four IMSA GT Championships (1988, 1989, 1990, and 1991). He won Le Mans in 1992. while David competed in Formula One for the Brabham team and has also won the Le Mans race as well as three Japanese and North American sportscar titles.{{cite web|title=David Brabham profile |url=http://www.davidbrabham.com/profiles.asp |access-date=9 November 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100704085735/http://www.davidbrabham.com/profiles.asp |archive-date=4 July 2010 }} One All-Japan Grand Touring Car Championship (1996) and two American Le Mans Series (2009 & 2010). He won Le Mans in 2009. Gary also drove briefly in Formula One, although his F1 career consisted of two DNPQ's for the Life team.{{cite web|title=Gary Brabham career summary|url=http://f1rejects.com/drivers/brabhamg/|publisher=Formula One rejects|access-date=9 November 2010|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110514012253/http://f1rejects.com/drivers/brabhamg/|archive-date=14 May 2011}} Brabham and Betty divorced in 1994 after 43 years. Brabham married his second wife, Margaret in 1995 and they lived on the Gold Coast, Queensland. Brabham's grandson Matthew (son of Geoff) graduated from karts in 2010 and won two ladders of the Road to Indy, eventually racing in the 2016 Indianapolis 500 and winning three Stadium Super Trucks championships. Another grandson, Sam, the son of David and Lisa, whose brother Mike also was an F1 driver, stepped up to car racing from karts in 2013 when he made his debut in the British Formula Ford Championship.{{cite web|url=http://www.britishformulaford.co.uk/sam-brabham-joins-formula-ford-grid/ |title=Sam Brabham Joins Formula Ford Grid |author= |date=28 March 2013 |website=British Formula Ford Championship |access-date=16 January 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131224094101/http://www.britishformulaford.co.uk/sam-brabham-joins-formula-ford-grid/ |archive-date=24 December 2013}} The Brabham family have been involved in world-class motorsport for over 60 years.{{cite web|url=http://www.brabham.co.uk/racing-dynasty/brabham-family|title=A Racing Dynasty – The Brabham Family|author=Brabham UK|access-date=19 December 2018|archive-date=19 December 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181219044104/http://www.brabham.co.uk/racing-dynasty/brabham-family|url-status=dead}}

Death

Brabham made his last public appearance on 18 May 2014, appearing with one of the cars he built.{{cite news|title=Australian F1 world champion driver Jack Brabham has died, aged 88|url=https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2014/may/19/australian-f1-world-champion-driver-jack-brabham-has-died-aged-88|newspaper=The Guardian|access-date=18 May 2014}} He died at his home on the Gold Coast on 19 May 2014, aged 88, following a lengthy battle with liver{{cite web|title=Sir Jack Brabham, ex-F1 champion, dies aged 88|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-27465380|access-date=18 May 2014|date=18 May 2014|publisher=BBC|archive-date=19 May 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140519044947/http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-27465380|url-status=live}} disease. He was eating breakfast with his wife, Margaret, when he died.{{cite web|last=Grover|first=Paul|title=Former three-time World Formula One champion Sir Jack Brabham dead|url=http://www.foxsports.com.au/motor-sport/former-threetime-world-formula-one-champion-sir-jack-brabham-dead/story-e6frf3z3-1226922303416|work=Fox Sports|access-date=18 May 2014|archive-date=19 May 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140519120019/http://www.foxsports.com.au//motor-sport/former-threetime-world-formula-one-champion-sir-jack-brabham-dead/story-e6frf3z3-1226922303416|url-status=live}} In a statement on the family's website, Brabham's son David confirmed his father's death.

"It's a very sad day for all of us", David Brabham stated. "My father passed away peacefully at home at the age of 88 this morning. He lived an incredible life, achieving more than anyone would ever dream of and he will continue to live on through the astounding legacy he leaves behind."

Brabham was the last surviving world champion from the 1950s era.

At his request, his ashes were scattered at the Tamborine Rainforest Skywalk in the Gold Coast hinterland on 4 September 2014. Brabham was a frequent visitor of the skywalk.{{cite web|url=https://monumentaustralia.org.au/themes/people/sport/display/115000-sir-jack-brabham-|title=Sir Jack Brabham|publisher=Monument Australia|access-date=24 May 2024|archive-date=24 May 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240524131837/https://monumentaustralia.org.au/themes/people/sport/display/115000-sir-jack-brabham-|url-status=live}}

Honours and awards

  • Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE; for services to international motor-car racing, 1966){{cite web |url=https://honours.pmc.gov.au/honours/awards/1107812 |title=It's an Honour: OBE |publisher=Itsanhonour.gov.au |date=11 June 1966 |access-date=20 May 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190222042243/https://honours.pmc.gov.au/honours/awards/1107812 |archive-date=22 February 2019 |url-status=live }}
  • Australian of the Year (1966){{cite book | author=Lewis, Wendy | title=Australians of the Year | publisher=Pier 9 Press | year=2010 | isbn=978-1-74196-809-5 }}
  • Knight Bachelor (for distinguished service to the sport of motor racing, 1979)Australia list: {{London Gazette |issue=47724 |date=29 December 1978 |supp=y |pages=33 |nolink=yes}}
  • Inductee, Sport Australia Hall of Fame (1985, elevated to Legend status in 2003){{cite web| url=https://sahof.org.au/hall-of-fame-member/jack-brabham/| title=Sir Jack Brabham| publisher=Sport Australia Hall of Fame| access-date=24 September 2020| archive-date=27 October 2020| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201027141138/https://sahof.org.au/hall-of-fame-member/jack-brabham/| url-status=live}}
  • Inductee, International Motorsports Hall of Fame (1990)
  • Australian Sports Medal (2000){{cite web |url=https://honours.pmc.gov.au/honours/awards/979103 |title=It's an Honour: Australian Sports Medal |publisher=Itsanhonour.gov.au |date=24 October 2000 |access-date=20 May 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190222042301/https://honours.pmc.gov.au/honours/awards/979103 |archive-date=22 February 2019 |url-status=live }}
  • Centenary Medal (2001){{cite web |url=https://honours.pmc.gov.au/honours/awards/1125793 |title=It's an Honour: Centenary Medal |publisher=Itsanhonour.gov.au |date=1 January 2001 |access-date=20 May 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190222042124/https://honours.pmc.gov.au/honours/awards/1125793 |archive-date=22 February 2019 |url-status=live }}
  • Officer of the Order of Australia (AO; for service to motor sport as an ambassador, mentor and promoter of safety, and to the community through support of charitable organisations, 2008){{cite web |url=https://honours.pmc.gov.au/honours/awards/1137401 |title=It's an Honour: AO |publisher=Itsanhonour.gov.au |date=26 January 2008 |access-date=20 May 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190222042303/https://honours.pmc.gov.au/honours/awards/1137401 |archive-date=22 February 2019 |url-status=live }}
  • Inductee, Australian Speedway Hall of Fame (2011)
  • Named a National Living Treasure (2012){{cite news | title =Seven added to national living treasure list | author =Lauren Farrow | work =The Canberra Times | date =5 March 2012 | url =http://www.canberratimes.com.au/national/seven-added-to-national-living-treasure-list-20120304-1ubaq.html | access-date =8 March 2012 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20120305101725/http://www.canberratimes.com.au/national/seven-added-to-national-living-treasure-list-20120304-1ubaq.html | archive-date =5 March 2012 | url-status =dead }}

Racing record

=Career summary=

class="wikitable" style="font-size: 90%; text-align:center"

! Season

! Series

! Team

! Races

! Wins

! Poles

! F/laps

! Podiums

! Points

! Position

1955

|align=left|Formula One

|align=left|Cooper Car Company

|1

|0

|0

|0

|0

|0

|{{abbr|NC|Not classified}}

1956

|align=left|Formula One

|align=left|Jack Brabham

|1

|0

|0

|0

|0

|0

|{{abbr|NC|Not classified}}

rowspan=4|1957

|rowspan="2" style="text-align:left"|Formula One

|align=left|Cooper Car Company

|3

|0

|0

|0

|0

|rowspan=2|0

|rowspan=2|{{abbr|NC|Not classified}}

align=left|Rob Walker Racing Team

|2

|0

|0

|0

|0

align=left|World Sportscar Championship

|align=left|Cooper Cars

|1

|0

|0

|0

|0

|0

|{{abbr|NC|Not classified}}

align=left|24 Hours of Le Mans

|align=left|Cooper Cars

|1

|0

|0

|0

|0

|N/A

|15th

rowspan=3|1958

|align=left|Formula One

|align=left|Cooper Car Company

|9

|0

|0

|0

|0

|3

|18th

align=left|World Sportscar Championship

|align=left|David Brown, Aston Martin Ltd.

|2

|0

|0

|0

|1

|0

|{{abbr|NC|Not classified}}

align=left|24 Hours of Le Mans

|align=left|David Brown Racing Dept.

|1

|0

|0

|0

|0

|N/A

|{{abbr|DNF|Did not finish}}

rowspan=2|1959

|align=left|Formula One

|align=left|Cooper Car Company

|8

|2

|1

|1

|5

|31

|style="background:#FFFFBF"|1st

align=left|World Sportscar Championship

|align=left|John Coombs Racing Organisation

|1

|0

|0

|0

|0

|0

|{{abbr|NC|Not classified}}

rowspan=2|1960

|align=left|Formula One

|align=left|Cooper Car Company

|8

|5

|3

|3

|5

|43

|style="background:#FFFFBF"|1st

align=left|Formula Two

|align=left|Cooper Car Company

|5

|2

|1

|0

|3

|20

|style="background:#FFFFBF"|1st

rowspan=2|1961

|align=left|Formula One

|align=left|Cooper Car Company

|8

|0

|1

|1

|0

|4

|11th

align=left|USAC Championship Car

|align=left|Cooper Car Company

|1

|0

|0

|0

|0

|200

|20th

1962

|align=left|Formula One

|align=left|Brabham Racing Organisation

|8

|0

|0

|0

|0

|9

|9th

rowspan=2|1963

|align=left|Formula One

|align=left|Brabham Racing Organisation

|10

|0

|0

|0

|1

|14

|7th

align=left|British Saloon Car Championship

|align=left|Alan Brown Racing Ltd

|1

|1

|0

|1

|1

|9

|22nd

rowspan=4|1964

|align=left|Formula One

|align=left|Brabham Racing Organisation

|10

|0

|0

|1

|2

|11

|8th

align=left|Tasman Series

|align=left|Ecurie Vitesse

|6

|3

|0

|0

|4

|3

|style="background:#DFDFDF"|2nd

align=left|USAC Championship Car

|align=left|John Zink

|1

|0

|0

|0

|0

|0

|{{abbr|NC|Not classified}}

align=left|British Saloon Car Championship

|align=left|Alan Brown Racing Ltd

|2

|1

|1

|0

|2

|14

|12th

rowspan=3|1965

|align=left|Formula One

|align=left|Brabham Racing Organisation

|6

|0

|0

|0

|1

|9

|10th

align=left|Tasman Series

|align=left|Ecurie Vitesse

|3

|0

|0

|0

|3

|21

|style="background:#FFDF9F"|3rd

align=left|British Saloon Car Championship

|align=left|Alan Brown Racing Ltd

|3

|1

|1

|0

|1

|12

|15th

rowspan=3|1966

|align=left|Formula One

|align=left|Brabham Racing Organisation

|9

|4

|3

|1

|5

|42

|style="background:#FFFFBF"|1st

align=left|Tasman Series

|align=left|Ecurie Vitesse

|2

|0

|0

|0

|1

|4

|10th

align=left|British Saloon Car Championship

|align=left|Alan Brown Racing Ltd

|3

|1

|1

|1

|3

|20

|12th

rowspan=3|1967

|align=left|Formula One

|align=left|Brabham Racing Organisation

|11

|2

|2

|0

|6

|46

|style="background:#DFDFDF"|2nd

align=left|Tasman Series

|align=left|Ecurie Vitesse

|6

|1

|0

|0

|2

|18

|style="background:#FFDF9F"|3rd

align=left|World Sportscar Championship

|align=left|Sidney Taylor

|1

|0

|0

|0

|0

|0

|{{abbr|NC|Not classified}}

rowspan=3|1968

|align=left|Formula One

|align=left|Brabham Racing Organisation

|11

|0

|0

|0

|0

|2

|23rd

align=left|Tasman Series

|align=left|Brabham

|2

|0

|0

|0

|0

|0

|{{abbr|NC|Not classified}}

align=left|World Sportscar Championship

|align=left|Alan Mann Racing Limited

|0

|0

|0

|0

|0

|0

|{{abbr|NC|Not classified}}

rowspan=4|1969

|align=left|Formula One

|align=left|Motor Racing Developments Ltd

|8

|0

|2

|1

|2

|14

|10th

align=left|Tasman Series

|align=left|Brabham

|1

|0

|0

|0

|1

|4

|8th

align=left|World Sportscar Championship

|align=left|Alan Mann Racing Ltd.

|0

|0

|0

|0

|0

|0

|{{abbr|NC|Not classified}}

align=left|USAC Championship Car

|align=left|Brabham

|1

|0

|0

|0

|0

|0

|{{abbr|NC|Not classified}}

rowspan=4|1970

|align=left|Formula One

|align=left|Motor Racing Developments Ltd

|13

|1

|1

|4

|4

|25

|6th

align=left|World Sportscar

|align=left|Matra Sports / Equipe Matra-Elf

|4

|0

|0

|0

|0

|0

|{{abbr|NC|Not classified}}

align=left|24 Hours of Le Mans

|align=left|Equipe Matra-Simca

|1

|0

|0

|0

|0

|N/A

|{{abbr|DNF|Did not finish}}

align=left|USAC Championship Car

|align=left|Brabham

|1

|0

|0

|0

|0

|0

|{{abbr|NC|Not classified}}

1976

|align=left|Bathurst 1000

|align=left|Esmonds Motors

|1

|0

|0

|0

|0

|N/A

|{{abbr|DNF|Did not finish}}

1977

|align=left|Bathurst 1000

|align=left|John Goss Racing Pty Limited

|1

|0

|0

|0

|0

|N/A

|18th

1978

|align=left|Bathurst 1000

|align=left|Jack Brabham Holdings Pty Ltd

|1

|0

|0

|0

|0

|N/A

|6th

1980

|align=left|British Saloon Car Championship

|align=left|SRG

|1

|0

|0

|0

|0

|2

|37th

1984

|align=left|World Sportscar Championship

|align=left|Rothmans Porsche

|0

|0

|0

|0

|0

|0

|{{abbr|NC|Not classified}}

=Complete Formula One World Championship results=

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)

{{Overflow|

{{wikitable| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:90%"

|-

! Year

! Entrant

! Chassis

! Engine

! 1

! 2

! 3

! 4

! 5

! 6

! 7

! 8

! 9

! 10

! 11

! 12

! 13

! {{Abbr|WDC|Final World Drivers' Championship position}}

! Points{{efn|name="droppedpoints"|Up until {{F1|1990}}, not all points scored by a driver contributed to their final World Championship tally (see list of points scoring systems for more information). Numbers without parentheses are Championship points; numbers in parentheses are total points scored.{{cite web|last=Diepraam|first=Mattijs|title=World Championship points systems|url=http://8w.forix.com/6thgear/points.html|work=8W|date=18 January 2019|access-date=1 December 2020|archive-date=24 September 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190924032459/http://8w.forix.com/6thgear/points.html|url-status=live}}}}

|-

| 1955

! Cooper Car Company

! Cooper T40

! Bristol BS1 2.0 L6

| ARG

| MON

| 500

| BEL

| NED

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| GBR
{{small|Ret}}

| ITA

|

|

|

|

|

|

! NC

! 0

|-

| 1956

! Jack Brabham

! Maserati 250F

! Maserati 250F1 2.5 L6

| ARG

| MON

| 500

| BEL

| FRA

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| GBR
{{small|Ret}}

| GER

| ITA

|

|

|

|

|

! NC

! 0

|-

|rowspan{{=}}"3"| 1957

! Cooper Car Company

!rowspan{{=}}3| Cooper T43

!rowspan{{=}}2| Climax FPF 2.0 L4

| ARG

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| MON
{{small|6}}

| 500

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| FRA
7 *

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| PES
{{small|7}}

| ITA

|

|

|

|

|

!rowspan{{=}}"3"| NC

!rowspan{{=}}"3"| 0

|-

!rowspan{{=}}"2"| Rob Walker Racing Team

|

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| GBR
{{small|Ret}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

! Climax FPF 1.5 L4

|

|

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| GER
Ret †

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

|rowspan{{=}}"2"| 1958

!rowspan{{=}}"2"| Cooper Car Company

!rowspan{{=}}"2"| Cooper T45

! Climax FPF 2.0 L4

| ARG

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| MON
{{small|4}}

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| NED
{{small|8}}

| 500

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| BEL
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| FRA
{{small|6}}

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| GBR
{{small|6}}

|

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| POR
{{small|7}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| ITA
{{small|Ret}}

|

|

|

!rowspan{{=}}"2"| 18th

!rowspan{{=}}"2"| 3

|-

! Climax FPF 1.5 L4

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| GER
Ret †

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| MOR
11 †

|

|

|-

| 1959

! Cooper Car Company

! Cooper T51

! Climax FPF 2.5 L4

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| MON
{{small|1}}

|| 500

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| NED
{{small|2}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffdf9f;"| FRA
{{small|3}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| GBR
{{small|1}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| GER
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| POR
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffdf9f;"| ITA
{{small|3}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| USA
{{small|4}}

|

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| 1st

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| 31 (34)

|-

|rowspan{{=}}"2"| 1960

!rowspan{{=}}"2"| Cooper Car Company

! Cooper T51

!rowspan{{=}}2| Climax FPF 2.5 L4

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| ARG
{{small|Ret}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

| rowspan{{=}}"2" style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| 1st

| rowspan{{=}}"2" style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| 43

|-

! Cooper T53

|

|style{{=}}"background:#000; color:white;"| MON
{{small|DSQ}}

| 500

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| NED
{{small|1}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| BEL
{{small|1}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| FRA
{{small|1}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| GBR
{{small|1}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| POR
{{small|1}}

| ITA

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| USA
{{small|4}}

|

|

|

|-

|rowspan{{=}}"2"| 1961

!rowspan{{=}}"2"| Cooper Car Company

! Cooper T55

! Climax FPF 1.5 L4

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| MON
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| NED
{{small|6}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| BEL
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| FRA
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| GBR
{{small|4}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

!rowspan{{=}}"2"| 11th

!rowspan{{=}}"2"| 4

|-

! Cooper T58

! Climax FWMV 1.5 V8

|

|

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| GER
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| ITA
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| USA
{{small|Ret}}

|

|

|

|

|

|-

|rowspan{{=}}"2"| 1962

!rowspan{{=}}"2"| Brabham Racing Organisation

! Lotus 24

!rowspan{{=}}2| Climax FWMV 1.5 V8

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| NED
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| MON
{{small|8}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| BEL
{{small|6}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| FRA
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| GBR
{{small|5}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

!rowspan{{=}}"2"| 9th

!rowspan{{=}}"2"| 9

|-

! Brabham BT3

|

|

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| GER
{{small|Ret}}

| ITA

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| USA
{{small|4}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| RSA
{{small|4}}

|

|

|

|

|-

|rowspan{{=}}"3"| 1963

!rowspan{{=}}"3"| Brabham Racing Organisation

! Lotus 25

!rowspan{{=}}3| Climax FWMV 1.5 V8

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| MON
{{small|9}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

!rowspan{{=}}"3"| 7th

!rowspan{{=}}"3"| 14

|-

! Brabham BT3

|

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| BEL
{{small|Ret}}

|

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| ITA
{{small|5}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

! Brabham BT7

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| NED
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| FRA
{{small|4}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| GBR
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| GER
{{small|7}}

|

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| USA
{{small|4}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| MEX
{{small|2}}

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| RSA
{{small|13}}

|

|

|

|-

|rowspan{{=}}"2"| 1964

!rowspan{{=}}"2"| Brabham Racing Organisation

! Brabham BT7

!rowspan{{=}}2| Climax FWMV 1.5 V8

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| MON
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| NED
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffdf9f;"| BEL
{{small|3}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffdf9f;"| FRA
{{small|3}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| GBR
{{small|4}}

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| GER
{{small|12}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

!rowspan{{=}}"2"| 8th

!rowspan{{=}}"2"| 11

|-

! Brabham BT11

|

|

|

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| AUT
{{small|9}}

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| ITA
{{small|14}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| USA
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| MEX
{{small|Ret}}

|

|

|

|-

| 1965

! Brabham Racing Organisation

! Brabham BT11

! Climax FWMV 1.5 V8

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| RSA
{{small|8}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| MON
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| BEL
{{small|4}}

| FRA

|style{{=}}"background:#fff;"| GBR
{{small|DNS}}

| NED

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| GER
{{small|5}}

| ITA

|style{{=}}"background:#ffdf9f;"| USA
{{small|3}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| MEX
{{small|Ret}}

|

|

|

! 10th

! 9

|-

|rowspan{{=}}"2"| 1966

!rowspan{{=}}"2"| Brabham Racing Organisation

! Brabham BT19

!rowspan{{=}}2| Repco 620 3.0 V8

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| MON
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| BEL
{{small|4}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| FRA
{{small|1}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| GBR
{{small|1}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| NED
{{small|1}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| GER
{{small|1}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| ITA
{{small|Ret}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

| rowspan{{=}}"2" style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| 1st

| rowspan{{=}}"2" style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| 42 (45)

|-

! Brabham BT20

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| USA
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| MEX
{{small|2}}

|

|

|

|

|-

|rowspan{{=}}"3"| 1967

!rowspan{{=}}"3"| Brabham Racing Organisation

! Brabham BT20

! Repco 620 3.0 V8

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| RSA
{{small|6}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

| rowspan{{=}}"3" style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| 2nd

| rowspan{{=}}"3" style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| 46 (48)

|-

! Brabham BT19

!rowspan{{=}}2| Repco 740 3.0 V8

|

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| MON
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| NED
{{small|2}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

! Brabham BT24

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| BEL
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| FRA
{{small|1}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| GBR
{{small|4}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| GER
{{small|2}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| CAN
{{small|1}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| ITA
{{small|2}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| USA
{{small|5}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| MEX
{{small|2}}

|

|

|-

|rowspan{{=}}"2"| 1968

!rowspan{{=}}"2"| Brabham Racing Organisation

! Brabham BT24

! Repco 740 3.0 V8

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| RSA
{{small|Ret}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

!rowspan{{=}}"2"| 23rd

!rowspan{{=}}"2"| 2

|-

! Brabham BT26

! Repco 860 3.0 V8

|

|style{{=}}"background:white;"| ESP
{{small|DNS}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| MON
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| BEL
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| NED
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| FRA
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| GBR
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| GER
{{small|5}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| ITA
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| CAN
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| USA
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| MEX
{{small|10}}

|

|-

| 1969

! Motor Racing Developments Ltd

! Brabham BT26A

! Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| RSA
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| ESP
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| MON
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| NED
{{small|6}}

| FRA

| GBR

| GER

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| ITA
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| CAN
{{small|2}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| USA
{{small|4}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffdf9f;"| MEX
{{small|3}}

|

|

! 10th

! 14

|-

| 1970

! Motor Racing Developments Ltd

! Brabham BT33

! Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| RSA
{{small|1}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| ESP
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| MON
{{small|2}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| BEL
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| NED
{{small|11}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffdf9f;"| FRA
{{small|3}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| GBR
{{small|2}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| GER
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| AUT
{{small|13}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| ITA
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| CAN
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| USA
{{small|10}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| MEX
{{small|Ret}}

! 6th

! 25

}}}}

:* Indicates shared drive with Mike MacDowel

: Indicates Formula 2 car

= Formula One non-championship results =

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

{{Overflow|

{{wikitable| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:90%"

|-

! Year

! Entrant

! Chassis

! Engine

! 1

! 2

! 3

! 4

! 5

! 6

! 7

! 8

! 9

! 10

! 11

! 12

! 13

! 14

! 15

! 16

! 17

! 18

! 19

! 20

! 21

|-

|rowspan{{=}}3| 1955

!rowspan{{=}}2| J. A. Brabham

! Cooper T24

! Alta Straight-4

| BUE

| VLN

| PAU

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| GLV
{{small|Ret}}

| BOR

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| INT
{{small|7}}

| NAP

| ALB

| CUR

| CRN

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

!rowspan{{=}}"2"| Cooper T40

!rowspan{{=}}"2"| Bristol Straight-6

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| RDX
{{small|4}}

| TLG

| OUL

| AVO

| SYR

|

|

|

|

|-

! Cooper Car Company

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#fff;"| LON
{{small|DNS}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| REC
{{small|4}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

| 1956

! J. A. Brabham

! Maserati 250F

! Maserati Straight-6

| BUE

| GLV
DNA

| SYR

|style{{=}}"background:#ffdf9f;"| AIN
{{small|3}}

|style{{=}}"background:#000; color:white;"| INT
{{small|DSQ}}

| NAP

| 100
DNA

|style{{=}}"background:#ffdf9f;"| VNW
{{small|3}}

| CAE

| BRH

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

|rowspan{{=}}3| 1957

!rowspan{{=}}2| Rob Walker Racing Team

! Cooper T41 (F2)

!rowspan{{=}}3| Climax Straight-4

| BUE

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| SYR
{{small|NC}}

| PAU

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

!rowspan{{=}}2| Cooper T43

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#000; color:white;"| MOR
{{small|DSQ}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

! Cooper Car Company

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| GLV
{{small|4}}

| NAP

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| RMS
{{small|NC}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| CAE
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| INT
{{small|Ret}}

| MOD

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

| 1958

! Cooper Car Company

! Cooper T45

! Climax Straight-4

| BUE

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| GLV
{{small|2}}

| SYR

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| AIN
{{small|2}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| INT
{{small|5}}

| CAE

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

| 1959

! Cooper Car Company

! Cooper T51

! Climax Straight-4

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| GLV
{{small|2}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| AIN
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| INT
{{small|1}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| OUL
{{small|2}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| SIL
{{small|2}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

|rowspan{{=}}2| 1960

!rowspan{{=}}2| Cooper Car Company

! Cooper T51

!rowspan{{=}}2| Climax Straight-4

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| BUE
{{small|Ret}}

| GLV

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

! Cooper T53

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| INT
{{small|2}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| SIL
{{small|1}}

| LOM

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| OUL
{{small|2}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

|rowspan{{=}}2| 1961

!rowspan{{=}}2| Cooper Car Company

! Cooper T53

!rowspan{{=}}2| Climax Straight-4

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| LOM
{{small|1}}

| GLV

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| PAU
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| BRX
{{small|1}}

| VIE

|

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| SIL
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| SOL
{{small|5}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| KAN
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| DAN
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| MOD
{{small|5}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| FLG
{{small|2}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

! Cooper T55

|

|

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| AIN
{{small|1}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| SYR
{{small|4}}

| NAP

| LON

|

|

|

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| OUL
{{small|2}}

| LEW

| VAL

| RAN

| NAT

| RSA

|-

|rowspan{{=}}3| 1962

!rowspan{{=}}3| Brabham Racing Organisation

! Lotus 21

!rowspan{{=}}3| Climax V8

| CAP

| BRX

| LOM
DNA

| LAV

| GLV

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| PAU
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| AIN
{{small|Ret}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

! Lotus 24

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| INT
{{small|6}}

| NAP

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| MAL
{{small|2}}

| CLP

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| RMS
{{small|4}}

| SOL

| KAN

| MED

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| DAN
{{small|1}}

|

|

|

|

|

|-

! Brabham BT3

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#ffdf9f;"| OUL
{{small|3}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| MEX
{{small|2}}

| RAN

| NAT

|

|-

|rowspan{{=}}2| 1963

!rowspan{{=}}2| Brabham Racing Organisation

! Brabham BT3

!rowspan{{=}}2| Climax V8

| LOM

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| GLV
{{small|6}}

| PAU

| IMO

| SYR

|style{{=}}"background:#fff;"| AIN
{{small|DNS}}

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| INT
{{small|7}}

| ROM

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| SOL
{{small|1}}

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| AUT
{{small|1}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

! Brabham BT7

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#ffdf9f;"| KAN
{{small|3}}

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| MED
{{small|12}}

|

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| OUL
{{small|4}}

| RAN

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

| 1964

! Brabham Racing Organisation

! Brabham BT7

! Climax V8

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| DMT
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| NWT
{{small|Ret}}

| SYR

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| AIN
{{small|1}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| INT
{{small|1}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| SOL
{{small|Ret}}

| MED

| RAN

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

|rowspan{{=}}2| 1965

! Brabham Racing Organisation

!rowspan{{=}}2| Brabham BT11

!rowspan{{=}}2| Climax V8

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| ROC
{{small|Ret}}

| SYR

|style{{=}}"background:#ffdf9f;"| SMT
{{small|3}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| INT
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| MED
{{small|6}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

! Scuderia Scribante

|

|

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| RAN
{{small|1}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

| 1966

! Brabham Racing Organisation

! Brabham BT19

! Repco V8

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| RSA
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| SYR
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| INT
{{small|1}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| OUL
{{small|1}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

|rowspan{{=}}3| 1967

!rowspan{{=}}3| Brabham Racing Organisation

! Brabham BT20

!rowspan{{=}}3| Repco V8

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| ROC
{{small|7}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| SPC
{{small|1}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| INT
{{small|2}}

| SYR

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

! Brabham BT24

|

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| OUL
{{small|1}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

! Brabham BT19

|

|

|

|

|

|style{{=}}"background:#ffdf9f;"| ESP
{{small|3}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

| 1968

! Brabham Racing Organisation

! Brabham BT26

! Repco V8

| ROC

| INT

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| OUL
{{small|Ret}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

| 1969

! Brabham Racing Organisation

! Brabham BT26A

! Cosworth V8

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| ROC
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffbf;"| INT
{{small|1}}

| MAD

| OUL

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|-

| 1970

! Brabham Racing Organisation

! Brabham BT33

! Cosworth V8

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| ROC
{{small|4}}

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| INT
{{small|Ret}}

| OUL

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

}}}}

=Complete Tasman Series results=

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:90%"
Year

! Car

! 1

! 2

! 3

! 4

! 5

! 6

! 7

! 8

! Rank

! Points

1964

! Brabham BT7A

| LEV

| style="background:#efcfff;"| PUK
{{small|Ret}}

| style="background:#dfdfdf;"| WIG
{{small|2}}

| TER

| style="background:#ffffbf;"| SAN
1

| style="background:#ffffbf;"| WAR
{{small|1}}

| style="background:#ffffbf;"| LAK
{{small|1}}

| style="background:#efcfff;"| LON
{{small|Ret}}

! style="background:#dfdfdf;"| 2nd

! style="background:#dfdfdf;"| 33

1965

! Brabham BT11A

| PUK

| LEV

| WIG

| TER

| style="background:#dfdfdf;"| WAR
{{small|2}}

| style="background:#ffffbf;"| SAN
{{small|1}}

| style="background:#dfdfdf;"| LON
{{small|2}}

|

! style="background:#ffdf9f;"| 3rd

! style="background:#ffdf9f;"| 21

1966

! Brabham BT19

| PUK

| LEV

| WIG

| TER

| WAR

| LAK

| style="background:#efcfff;"| SAN
{{small|Ret}}

| style="background:#ffdf9f;"| LON
{{small|3}}

! 10th

! 4

1967

! Brabham BT23A

| style="background:#efcfff;"| PUK
{{small|Ret}}

| style="background:#cfcfff;"| WIG
{{small|13}}

| style="background:#dfdfdf;"| LAK
{{small|2}}

| style="background:#dfffdf;"| WAR
{{small|4}}

| style="background:#efcfff;"| SAN
{{small|NC}}

| style="background:#ffffbf;"| LON
{{small|1}}

|

|

! style="background:#ffdf9f;"| 3rd

! style="background:#ffdf9f;"| 18

1968

! Brabham BT21E

| PUK

| LEV

| WIG

| TER

| SUR

| style="background:#cfcfff;"| WAR
{{small|7}}

| style="background:#efcfff;"| SAN
{{small|Ret}}

| LON

! NC

! 0

1969

! Brabham BT31B

| PUK

| LEV

| WIG

| TER

| LAK

| WAR

| style="background:#ffdf9f;"| SAN
{{small|3}}

|

! 8th

! 4

=Complete World Sportscar Championship results=

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

{{Overflow|

{{wikitable| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:90%"

! Year

! Team

! Car

! 1

! 2

! 3

! 4

! 5

! 6

! 7

! 8

! 9

! 10

! 11

! 12

! 13

! 14

! DC

! Points

|-

! 1957

! {{flagicon|GBR}} Cooper Cars

! Cooper T39

| BUE

| SEB

| TAR

| NUR

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| LMS
{{small|15}}

| SWE

| VEN

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

! NC

! 0

|-

! 1958

! {{flagicon|GBR}} David Brown, Aston Martin Ltd.

! Aston Martin DBR1/300

| BUE

| SEB

| TAR

|NUR

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| LMS
{{small|Ret}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfdfdf;"| RAC
{{small|2}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

! NC

! 0

|-

! 1959

! {{flagicon|GBR}} John Coombs Racing Organisation

! Cooper-Climax Monaco T49

| SEB

| TAR

| NUR

| LMS

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| RAC
{{small|Ret}}

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

! NC

! 0

|-

! 1967

! {{flagicon|IRE}} Sidney Taylor

! Lola T70 Chevrolet

| DAY

| SEB

| MNZ

| SPA

| TAR

| NUR

| LMS

| HOC

| MUG

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| BRA
{{small|Ret}}

| PER

| ZEL

| VIL

| NUR

! NC

! 0

|-

! 1968

! {{flagicon|GBR}} Alan Mann Racing Limited

! Ford F3L

| DAY

| SEB

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffff;"| BRA
{{small|DNS}}

| MNZ

| TAR

| NUR

| SPA

| WAT

| ZEL

| LMS

|

|

|

|

! NC

! 0

|-

! 1969

! {{flagicon|GBR}} Alan Mann Racing Ltd.

! Ford F3L

| DAY

| SEB

|style{{=}}"background:#ffffff;"| BRA
{{small|DNS}}

| MNZ

| TAR

| SPA

| NUR

| LMS

| WAT

| ZEL

|

|

|

|

! NC

! 0

|-

! 1970

! {{flagicon|FRA}} Matra Sports / Equipe Matra-Elf

! Matra MS650

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| DAY
{{small|10}}

| SEB

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| BRA
{{small|12}}

|style{{=}}"background:#dfffdf;"| MNZ
{{small|5}}

| TAR

| SPA

| NUR

|style{{=}}"background:#efcfff;"| LMS
{{small|Ret}}

| WAT

| ZEL

|

|

|

|

! NC

! 0

|-

! 1984

! {{flagicon|FRG}} Rothmans Porsche
{{flagicon|GBR}} GTi Engineering

! Porsche 956B

| MNZ

| SIL

| LMS

| NUR

| BRA

| MOS

| SPA

| IMO

| FJI

| KYL

|style{{=}}"background:#cfcfff;"| SAN
{{small|NC}}

|

|

|

! NC

! 0

}}}}

=Complete 24 Hours of Le Mans results=

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:90%"
Year

! Team

! Co-drivers

! Car

! Class

! Laps

! {{abbr|Pos.|Overall position}}

! {{abbr|Class
pos.|Class position}}

1957

|align="left"| {{flagicon|UK}} Cooper Cars

|align="left"| {{flagicon|UK}} Ian Raby

|align="left"| Cooper T39

| S
1.1

| 254

| 15th

|style="background:#ffdf9f;"| 3rd

1958

|align="left"| {{Flagicon|GBR}} David Brown Racing Dept.

|align="left"| {{flagicon|UK}} Stirling Moss

|align="left"| Aston Martin DBR1/300

| S3.0

| 30

| colspan=2|DNF
(Con rod)

1970

|align="left"| {{flagicon|FRA}} Equipe Matra-Simca

|align="left"| {{flagicon|FRA}} François Cevert

|align="left"| Matra-Simca MS650

| P
3.0

| 76

| colspan="2" | DNF

=Indianapolis 500 results=

valign="top"

|

{|class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

Year

!Car

!Start

!Qual

!Rank

!Finish

!Laps

!Led

!Retired

1961

|17 ||13 ||145.144 ||17 ||9 ||200 ||0 ||Running

1964

|52 ||25 ||152.504 ||15 ||20 ||77 ||0 ||Fuel Tank

1969

|95 ||29 ||163.875 ||29 ||24 ||58 ||0 ||Ignition

1970

|32 ||26 ||166.397 ||22 ||13 ||175 ||1 ||Piston

colspan="6"|Totals5101

|

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
Starts

|4

Poles

|0

Front row

|0

Wins

|0

Top 5

|0

Top 10

|1

Retired

|3

|}

=Complete British Saloon Car Championship results=

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap.)

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:85%"

! Year

! Team

! Car

! Class

! 1

! 2

! 3

! 4

! 5

! 6

! 7

! 8

! 9

! 10

! 11

! {{Tooltip|Pos.|Championship position}}

! Pts

! Class

1963

! Alan Brown Racing Ltd

! Ford Galaxie

! {{Tooltip|D|Class D}}

| SNE

| OUL

| GOO

| AIN

| SIL

| CRY

| SIL

| BRH

| BRH

| OUL

|style="background:#FFFFBF;"| SIL
ovr:1
cls:1

! 22nd

! 9

! 6th

1964

! Alan Brown Racing Ltd

! Ford Galaxie

! {{Tooltip|D|Class D}}

|style="background:#FFFFBF;"| SNE
ovr:1
cls:1

|style="background:#FFFFFF;"| GOO
DNS

| OUL

| AIN

| SIL

| CRY

| BRH

|style="background:#FFFFBF;"| OUL
ovr:3
cls:1

|

|

|

! 12th

! 14

! 5th

1965

! Alan Brown Racing Ltd

! Ford Mustang

! {{Tooltip|D|Class D}}

| BRH

| OUL

| SNE

| GOO

| SIL

|style="background:#FFDF9F;"| CRY
ovr:6†
cls:3†

|style="background:#FFFFBF;"| BRH
ovr:1
cls:1

|style="background:#000000; color:white"| OUL
DSQ

|

|

|

! 15th

! 12

! 4th

1966

! Alan Brown Racing Ltd

! Ford Mustang

! {{Tooltip|D|Class D}}

|style="background:#FFFFBF;"| SNE
ovr:1
cls:1

|style="background:#DFDFDF;"| GOO
ovr:2
cls:2

|style="background:#FFFFFF;"| SIL
DNS

|style="background:#DFDFDF;"| CRY
ovr:2†
cls:2†

| BRH

| BRH

| OUL

| BRH

|

|

|

! 12th

! 20

! 4th

1980

! SRG

! Renault 5 Gordini

! {{Tooltip|B|Class B}}

| MAL

| OUL

| THR

| SIL

| SIL

|style="background:#DFFFDF;"| BRH
ovr:18
cls:5

| MAL

| BRH

| THR

| SIL

|

! 37th

! 2

! 12th

colspan="18"|{{center|{{small|Source:{{cite web |last1=de Jong |first1=Frank |title=British Saloon Car Championship |url=http://www.touringcarracing.net/Pages/BSCC.html |website=History of Touring Car Racing 1952-1993 |access-date=18 January 2025}}}}}}

† Events with 2 races staged for the different classes.

=Complete Bathurst 1000 results=

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:90%"
Year

! Team

! Co-drivers

! Car

! Class

! Laps

! {{abbr|Pos.|Overall position}}

! {{abbr|Class
pos.|Class position}}

1976

|align="left"| {{flagicon|AUS}} Esmonds Motors

|align="left"| {{flagicon|GBR}} Stirling Moss

|align="left"| Holden LH Torana SL/R 5000 L34

| 3001cc – 6000cc

| 37

| colspan="2" | DNF

1977

|align="left"| {{Flagicon|AUS}} John Goss Racing Pty Limited

|align="left"| {{Flagicon|AUS}} Geoff Brabham

|align="left"| Ford XC Falcon GS500 Hardtop

| 3001cc – 6000cc

| 141

| 18th

| 9th

1978

|align="left"| {{flagicon|AUS}} Jack Brabham Holdings Pty Ltd

|align="left"| {{flagicon|AUS}} Brian Muir

|align="left"| Holden LX Torana SS A9X 4 Door

| A

| 153

| 6th

| 6th

Notes

{{notelist}}

References

=Citations=

{{reflist}}

=Sources=

{{refbegin}}

  • {{cite book

| last = Brabham

| first = Jack

| title = When the Flag Drops

| publisher=Kimber

| location = London

| year = 1971

| isbn = 978-7-183-00920-4}}

  • {{cite book

| last = Brabham

| first = Jack

|author2=Nye, Doug

| title = The Jack Brabham Story

| publisher=Motorbooks International

|year=2004

| isbn = 0-7603-1590-6}}

  • {{cite book |last1=Davis |first1=Tony |last2=Armont |first2=Akos |title=Brabham: The Untold Story of Formula One |date=2019 |publisher=HarperCollins Publishers |location=Sydney |isbn=9781460757475}}
  • {{cite book

| last = Drackett

| first = Phil

| title = Brabham—Story of a racing team

| publisher=Arthur Baker Ltd

|year=1985

| isbn = 0-213-16915-0 }}

  • {{cite book

| last = Henry

| first = Alan

| title = Brabham, the Grand Prix Cars

| publisher=Osprey

| year = 1985

| isbn = 0-905138-36-8 }}

  • {{cite book

| last = Lawrence

| first = Mike

| title = Grand Prix Cars 1945–1965

| publisher=Motor Racing Publications

| year = 1998

| isbn = 1-899870-39-3}}

  • {{cite book

| last = Lawrence

| first = Mike

| title = Brabham+Ralt+Honda: The Ron Tauranac story

| publisher=Motor Racing Publications

| year = 1999

| isbn = 1-899870-35-0 }}

  • {{cite book

| last = Unique

| first = (Various)

| title = Brabham – the man and the machines

| date = January 2009

| publisher=Unique Motor Books

| isbn = 978-1-84155-619-2 }}

{{refend}}

=Further reading=

{{refbegin}}

  • {{cite web |last1=Bishop |first1=Matt |title=Remember Jack Brabham this weekend: one of the greatest of all |url=https://www.motorsportmagazine.com/articles/single-seaters/f1/remember-jack-brabham-this-weekend-one-of-the-greatest-of-all/ |website=Motor Sport |access-date=6 April 2025 |date=14 May 2024}}

{{refend}}