Brock Yates dies (Update)

UPDATE Our good friend, the brilliant writer, my Cannonball team mate Brock Yates passed away yesterday after a long and brave struggle with Alzheimer's disease. Although Brock has been "gone" for some time, the finality of his leaving is hitting all of us in the automotive world with shock and sadness. He was brave, kind, funny, unconventional and talented. For decades starting in the 1960ies his columns in Car and Driver magazine were jewels in the sea of motor racing literature.

Brock Yates' creation of the "Cannonball Sea to Shining Sea Memorial Trophy Run" and the movies resulting from it are cultural landmarks celebrating a freedom loving era which is gone forever. He set a mark in motor racing history and he leaves a hole in our hearts.

Dan and Evi Gurney and the All American Racing Team

10/06/16 Automotive-journalist icon Brock Yates, inventor of the Cannonball Run cross-country road race, writer of successful screenplays and a fixture for decades at Car and Driver, died Oct. 5 from complications of Alzheimer's. He was 82.

"Brock has been a hero of mine since I first got to know him," Dan Gurney said at a Yates tribute several years ago at the Petersen Museum in Los Angeles. Gurney and Yates drove a Ferrari 365 GTB/4 across the country in 1971 in 35 hours, 54 minutes in the original Cannonball. "He is a pioneer, historian, instigator and defender of freedom."

Yates' columns in Car and Driver attacked everything from the 55-mph speed limit to the arrogance of safety advocate Ralph Nader. They spoke to the frustrations of people who loved cars but who were prevented from enjoying them by meddling government bureaucrats. Yates said in the pages of the magazine and in other outlets in which his work appeared what so many car enthusiasts felt.

"He was always a guy who was just a little farther than the rest," said Yates fan Jay Leno, who also spoke at the Petersen tribute.

"Brock and I were in a bar," said director Hal Needham, recounting the founding of "The Cannonball Run" movie, "and he told me about this race he created."

Other tributes that night came in video form from Bob Lutz, Bob Varsha and David Hobbs. By the time Yates got up to speak, he was, uncharacteristically, at a loss for words.

"I don't know what to say other than to say, thank you," he said that night.

No, thank you Brock, for everything you did and everything you inspired us to do. Godspeed.

Mark Vaughn – West Coast Editor/AutoWeek