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Q&A: A.J. Foyt On His 90th Birthday

Written by 
Published in Racing
Thursday, 16 January 2025 10:01

Editors Note: In recognition of A.J. Foyts 90th birthday today, his public relations staff headed by Anne Fornoro prepared the following interview with the four-time Indianapolis 500 winner.

HOUSTON A.J. Foyt turned 90 years old today.

The milestone birthday is remarkable for several reasons: his record-setting achievements in one of motorsports most dangerous eras, his comeback from death-defying accidents both on track and off, and his incredible resilience with several health issues.

We asked this tough Texan a few questions:

When you look back over your career, what makes you most proud?

A.J.: I think my mother and daddy seeing me win Indy four times. When I was coming up racing local here in Houston, my dream was to someday go to Indianapolis. I did. My daddy always changed my right rear tire, he was part of my success. Having my mother and daddy seeing me win my fourth before they died made me real proud.

A.J. Foyt hammers the throttle in the Sheraton Thompson No. 6 Ford championship dirt car en route to winning the 1969 Hoosier Hundred at the Indiana State Fairgrounds. (John Mahoney photo)

What is it about you that you were able to achieve such incredible success?

A.J.: I would say the best thing that made me was that I had such great fans and I wanted to satisfy them. I think that gave me a lot of motivation in my racing career, my fans. And I still love em.

But what was it in you, before you had fans?

A.J.: I always drove hard, even at the local tracks because I liked to win. And when I got to Indy, the fans made want to win even more. I know they loved winning and I loved winning so we had a good combination together.

What are some of the best advances in racing that youve seen?

A.J.: I would say that they made the cars so much safer than what they used to be. They carry a lot less fuel and thats the biggest thing that racing has gained. I dont say its any better but its a lot safer. Im always looking for safety too cause I had a lot of friends that lost their lives. I was one of the lucky ones cause I made it through all that.

How did you survive all that? It was such a deadly era particularly in 1964 when you won 10 of 13 racesstill a record.

A.J.:  I really cant answer that because I lost a lot of friends. Thats the reason I didnt run with too many people, I kinda stayed by myself cause I didnt want it on my mind.

How did you put it out of your mind In 58 when you lost Pat OConnor and in 64 when you lost Eddie Sachs (and Dave MacDonald)?

A.J.: I just tried to not think about it. Im here today but I might be gone tomorrow. I knew that. After I won Indy, everybody couldnt believe I went sprint car racing and midget racing. Theyd say after you won Indy, youd lose your life within a month or two or get hurt real bad. I just didnt pay attention to that. I had a life to live and I was enjoying it. If I lost my life, thats the way Id have to go.

Whats the toughest recovery you had to come back from?

A.J.: It was when I was burnt pretty good at Milwaukee (1966). I got broke up worse than the burns I had on my hands and face but I think the burns were the worse thing I suffered really. You get broken bones, you heal them quicker. But the burns take so much time.

I had gotten Jimmy Clarks Lotus from Colin Chapman and in practice, it broke the rear  suspension going in Turn 1 and it put me into that gate and it just blew up. We didnt have fuel cells and all that stuff back then. You could carry 75 gallons of fuel. I didnt have that much on there, dont get me wrong, and when it hit in the front end, it caught on fire. I was kind of hung in it, I couldnt get out. I had to put my hands in it and pry myself out and I slid the skin off my hands. It was pretty painful.

A burn is one of the worst things you can have. I dont think racings any better than when I raced but what is better is that you dont see a lot of guys getting burnt real bad. Thats the one beautiful thing about racing is that its so much safer.

Note: Although Foyt remembers he was out of the car seven months, actually he was back in a car three weeks later at Atlanta. Mechanical issues ended his race in five laps. A month later he ran Indianapolis Raceway Park, again out after five laps with mechanical issues. He returned a month later to qualify second and finish third in a 100-lapper at Springfield.

A.J. Foyt en route to winning his fourth Indianapolis 500 in 1977.(IMS photo)

Is there anything you would change over the course of your career?

No. I raced local and I had a dream of going to Indy and then be fortunate enough to win it, how many people have dreams that come true? It was my dream when I went up there and bought tickets and sat up in Turn 2. A couple years later, I was lucky enough to get a ride. People saw me run Salem, Indiana in a sprint car and I think thats what really helped me get a ride at Indianapolis. They said if I was brave enough to run the high banks, Id be good at Indy. (laughs) Hell, I didnt know any better, it was just a race track to me.

The high speeds never scared you?

A.J.: Not really. That never entered my mind. I went to the race track and whatever it was, I tried to adjust to it. I went to Daytona (in a stock car) and I was fortunate enough to win that. Then went to LeMans Dan Gurney and I what a super guy he was to pick me and be on Shelbys team and be fortunate enough to win LeMans. Ive had a wonderful life and if I passed on today, nobody couldve had a better life than I had.

If you had to pick out the best day of your life, what would it be?

A.J.:  I think passing my drivers test at Indianapolis. I would say that was one of the greatest thrills of my life. I know it was.

What did you do after you passed it?

A.J.: There used to be the White Front (restaurant and bar) down from the track on 16th. After I qualified, I went there and Bettenhausen (Tony, Sr.) and Bob Veith and Freeland (Don), all of them were up there cause thats where they all hung out. They said, What are you doing here? And I said, Im gonna have a Coke. They said, Heres a Screwdriver, its like orange juice. I said, Well Ill try one. So I had one, then two, then three, and I had to go to the restroom. I stood up and the room kind of spun and I said, Damn, I cant see! Well, the next day they had all the rookies out, and I was one of the quickest ones [in fact he was the fastest rookie qualifier starting 12th] but I had hugged onto the toilet all night long! I havent had a Screwdriver since 1958. And I dont plan on having another one.

Thats one of the highlights and after I won Indy, someone said, I bet you and your wife went out and really celebrated. And I said, Yeah.  They had a White Castle Hamburger  right there in front of the Speedway and my wife and I had two White Castle hamburgers, I think they were eleven cents a piece. We really celebrated.

You really wouldnt change anything?

A.J.: Nope, I come from nothing and had a wonderful life. Whod ever think Id be here now at 90 years old?

What do you think about being 90 years old?

I dont think Im sposed to live this long! Im living for a reason but I dont know why!

How do you occupy your time these days?

I keep buying land and try to develop it. I love to get on my bulldozers and tractors. I do that almost every other day. People say youre out there by yourself. And I say, Its peaceful. I dont have to listen to anybody but me.

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