The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Sir Jackie Stewart pays tribute to ‘the best’ at Jim Clark museum reopening

REVAMP: Former racing stars attend event in Duns

- GRAHAM BROWN gbrown@thecourier.co.uk

Formula One legend Sir Jackie Stewart has paid tribute to the friend who was the “best he ever raced against” at the official opening of the new Jim Clark motorsport museum.

Half a century after unveiling the original Jim Clark Rooms in the Fifeborn star’s adopted Borders home of Duns, Sir Jackie and fellow Scots race ace Allan McNish spoke of Clark’s enduring legacy at the special event to mark the completion of a five-year, £1.6 million redevelopm­ent of the attraction.

It charts the career of Clark, from his earliest days to World Championsh­ip success in 1963 and then 1965, when he became the first and, so far, only driver to also win the legendary Indianapol­is 500 race in the same season.

For the first time the museum can permanentl­y display the famous Lotus cars which Clark raced.

Visitor numbers have exceeded expectatio­ns since the reopening around six weeks ago, with almost 5,000 fans flocking from across the globe, and Sir Jackie said the museum was now a fitting tribute to the racing hero.

He spoke of his close friendship with Clark and the racing rivalry at events such as the 1965 Spa Grand Prix, Stewart’s first F1 event at the fearsome circuit and a race in which the two Scots dominated the field.

“Jimmy was the best racing driver I ever raced against, I have always said that,” said Sir Jackie yesterday.

He joked with the crowd about Clark’s precision behind the wheel being in contrast to the Borders sheep farmer’s inability to choose from a restaurant menu or select which movie to watch.

“Jimmy became a global person. Scotland’s greatest export is our people, and Jimmy was part of that, taking motor racing to a new audience,” said Sir Jackie.

Figures from the world of motorsport at the event included Courier Country stars Gordon Shedden, a three-time British Touring Car champion, and Robert Reid from Perthshire who was World Rally Champion in 2001.

Alongside Clark’s Lotus 25 and Lotus Cortina, the centrepiec­e of the new museum is a collection of more than 100 trophies from his remarkable career, tragically cut short in a race at Hockenheim in Germany in April 1968, aged just 32.

The museum project is a partnershi­p between Scottish Borders Council, Live Borders and the Jim Clark Trust, with funding coming from a range of sources and donations from across the world.

 ??  ?? Jim Clark after winning the World Championsh­ip in 1963.
Jim Clark after winning the World Championsh­ip in 1963.
 ??  ?? Sir Jackie Stewart at the opening.
Sir Jackie Stewart at the opening.

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