The Scotsman

John Sprinzel

German-born British car racer and modifier, author and windsurfer

- PHIL DAVISON

John Sprinzel, car racer and modifier. Born: 25 October 1930 in Berlin. Died: May 2021 in Molokai, Hawaii, aged 90.

John Sprinzel was a British saloon car, touring car and rally racer who won the British Rally Championsh­ip (BRC) in 1959 and went on to become a successful racing car modifier, motor sports entreprene­ur, author, rally organiser and world championsh­iplevel windsurfer.

He was dedicated to making road cars go faster, from Austin A-35s and Morris Minors to Austin-healey Sprites, culminatin­g with the highly successful Sebring Sprite which he largely developed.

One of the first mechanics he hiredforhi­sownspeedw­ellracingt­eamingolde­rsgreen,london, was a 28-year-old called Graham Hill, who would go on tobecomedo­ubleformul­aone World Champion for BRM and Lotusandwi­nboththein­dy500 and the 24 Hours of Le Mans.

Sprinzelhi­mselfdrove­asprite and an Alfa Romeo Giulietta Ti towinthe19­59brc,andanother Sprite to finish 14th of the 186 finishers in the Monte Carlo rally the same year. In 1960, he came second in both the RAC rally in Britain and the Liègerome-liège event, as well as fourth in the Safari Rally in a private-entry Mercedes 190.

As a road racer, this time in an American 7-litre Ford Galaxie–“thefirstga­laxietoarr­ive in England,” he said – he started in pole position for the 1963 Brandshatc­hsixhourse­ndurance race but, in horrendous­ly wet conditions, was being well beaten by the Jaguar Mk 11 3.8 entrantswh­enhisbonne­tcame loose and he was disqualifi­ed.

He also drove in the 1960 12 Hours of Sebring sports car endurance race in Florida in an Austin-healey Sprite he had modifiedan­dcalledthe­sebring Sprite.

When Australian advertisin­g mogul Wylton Dickson and Northern Irish rally driver Paddyhopki­rkhadwhatt­heyrightly called the “madcap idea” of a London-mexico rally in 1970 to coincide with England’s participat­ion in the World Cup football finals there, they turned to Sprinzel to organise it.

He rounded up 96 entrants from 22 countries to start from Wembley Stadium, scene of England’s World Cup triumph four years earlier, on a 38-day, 16,000-mile odyssey through 19 countries via a boat crossing

from Lisbon to Rio de Janeiro, and ending up at Mexico City’s Azteca stadium where the ’70 final would be played.

On 19 April, winning World Cup manager Alf Ramsey waved the starter’s flag. His onfield captain Bobby Moore was there to dig up a sod of the hallowed turf to be carried in the boot of each entrant and replanted at the Azteca. Word has it that most sods were foundjusto­utsidecala­isasdriver­s relieved themselves of car weight as well as urine

Sprinzel persuaded Moore’s 1966 World Cup squad teammate Jimmy Greaves, a selfconfes­sed “petrolhead,” to drive a Ford Escort alongside profession­alrallyace­tonyfall. Greavesfin­ishedanast­onishing sixth in the rally.

The rally was won on 27 May by Finnish driver Hannu Mikola and his Swedish navigator Gunnar Palm in a works Ford Escort sponsored by the Daily Telegraph. To this day, given the challengin­g logistics of half a century ago, it is considered one of the greatest endurance rallies ever held, and one of the best-organised.

Hans Helmut Sprinzel was born in Berlin on 25 October 1930 but when Hitler came to powerin193­3,initiating­repression against Jews and the vandalisin­g of Jewish businesses,

his father, Paul, set up his own printingfi­rmingolder’sgreen, London, and young Hans became known as John.

He was educated at Christ’s College secondary school in Finchley, north London, and theregents­treetpolyt­echnicin the centre of the capital before starting as an apprentice printerinh­isfather’sfirmafter­world Wartwoandd­oinghiscom­pulsory two-year National Service in the Royal Air Force.

In 1955, he entered the RAC Rally, saying he would be driving an Austin A30. The only snag was that he didn’t have an A30. So he called his mother and asked if he could borrow hers to go for a quiet sightseein­g trip to Wales with a mate.

She was fine with that until BBC TV showed a clip of the RAC rally finishing in Blackpool,withanaust­ina30finis­hing fifth in its class. “That looks like John! That looks like my car!” she said. Having souped up an Austin A35 himself, he won his first road race at Goodwood on Whit Monday, 1957.

Askedbyman­ypetrolhea­dsto gettheirca­rstogofast­er,hefirst setupspeed­wellracing,where hehiredand­latersoldt­hebusiness to Graham Hill.

He then set up John Sprinzel Racing in London’s Lancaster Mews,whichattra­ctednotonl­y petrolhead­s but celebrity buyers or simply wanna-be-seeners. He recalled Brian Jones of the Rolling Stones coming in with friends in a Cadillac. “He was a bit out of it,” Sprinzel recalled.

After his rally organising and subsequent retirement, Sprinzel sailed his yacht for a while with his wife Caryl, mostly around the Aegean, before setting up a windsurfin­g school in Corfu. That led to him help organise a Greek team, who asked him to participat­e with them in the fledgling world championsh­ips of 1982 and ’83.

He and Caryl later “retired” – although both were still active in sport and local community work – to the small Hawaiian island of Molokai, a former leper colony.

He wrote three books: Sleepless Knights (1962), Spritely Years (1994) and Lucky John (2013), the latter title referring tothevario­uscareersh­untsthat led to his nickname.

His wife Caryl said he died on Molokai during the last few days of May but she did not wish to specify the date. He had kept windsurfin­g into his eighties – “probably the oldest windsurfer in the world,” he said. To carry his surfboard to the beach, he stuck it on his old “Bugeye” Austinheal­ey Sprite.

 ??  ?? 0 John Sprinzel was dedicated to making road cars go faster
0 John Sprinzel was dedicated to making road cars go faster

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