William Theodore Ribbs Jr.
William Theodore Ribbs, Jr. was born on January 3,
1956
in San Jose,
California,
to Geraldine and William T. Ribbs, Sr. Rather than managing the
successful family plumbing business founded by his grandfather in
1927,
Ribbs races cars professionally. He is the first African American to
compete in the Indianapolis 500 and one of the only African American
NASCAR racers.
In his nearly 25 years of professional autoracing, Willy T. Ribbs
has acheived many firsts as the winningest African American driver
in history:
Ribbs' love of cars and racing
began at the age of four. At age nine, Ribbs worked as a ranch hand
on his grandfather's ranch. His first foray into motorsports was
driving Formula Ford cars in Europe soon after his high school
graduation in
1975.
He won the Dunlop Championship in his first year of competition,
then returned to the United States and raced Formula Atlantic cars.
Ribbs won the pole in the Long Beach Formula Atlantic race in
1982,
outpacing veteran drivers before his engine failed. In
1983,
he won five races in the SCCA Trans-Am and was honored as Pro Rookie
of the Year. After competing in two NASCAR Winston Cup races in
1986,
financial difficulties, including the lack of corporate sponsorship
kept his team from finishing the season.
In 1989,
Bill and Camille Cosby stepped in and funded the Raynor-Cosby
Motorsports team with Ribbs as the top driver. Ribbs won two top-ten
events in his
1990
Championship Auto Racing Team (CART) Indianapolis debut. In
1991,
he became the first African American to qualify for the Indianapolis
500, and he qualified again in
1993.
However, by
1994
it was clear that corporate sponsors were not yet willing to back an
African American driver, despite Cosby's offer of free television
commercials in return for sponsorship. Ribbs was released from his
Indianapolis 500 contract and spent the year competing in the CART
series, finishing in the top ten at
Michigan
and Denver Grand Prix races.
In 1999,
Ribbs raced in the Indy Racing League (IRL). In
2000,
he signed with Victoria Motorsports SCCA Trans-Am team and finished
second at Long Beach, third at
Detroit
and fourth at Las Vegas. He was awarded the Johnson Triple Crown. In
2001,
Ribbs joined the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series with the support of
Dodge, which initiated a motorsports diversity program to provide
opportunities for minorities to race. This made Ribbs the first
African American in the modern era to compete full time in a major
NASCAR division. Ribbs successfully raced in the NAPA truck series
out west in 2002 and 2003, winning the 2002 championship. He
has raised his two children, Sasha and William Theodore Ribbs III,
as a single parent.
Today, he’s behind a 34” Perazzi. From Las Vegas to Orlando, San
Antonio and Reno with London, Moscow and the rest of Europe on the
calendar, Willy T, Ribbs is in full pursuit of what was once an
off-season hobby since age nine. He is currently competing in Sporting Clay
Shooting events.
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