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Gerald (Jerry) R. Forsythe (born in Marshall, Illinois in 1942) is an American businessman and auto racing magnate, best known for being one of the three men (Kevin Kalkhoven and Paul Gentilozzi are the other two) that owned the Champ Car World Series. Forsythe also owned a racing team, Forsythe Championship Racing, that competed in the Champ ...
Kalkhoven at IMS in 2011. Kevin Oscar Newton Kalkhoven (1944 – 4 January 2022) was an Australian venture capitalist and auto racing magnate based in California.He was CEO of JDS Uniphase and was an investor in Cosworth Group Holdings Limited, an automotive technology business headquartered in Northampton, United Kingdom.
The team returned in 1994 as Forsythe-Green Racing with co-owner Barry Green, but by the next year the two had split and Green took their driver Jacques Villeneuve and Canadian cigarette sponsor Player's LTD to his new Team Green and won the 1995 Indianapolis 500 and CART championship. Forsythe reunited with Teo Fabi in a full-time effort in ...
Clifford Forsythe (1929–2000), Northern Ireland politician; Diana E. Forsythe (1947–1997), American anthropologist; Drew Forsythe (born 1949), Australian entertainer; George Forsythe (1917–1972), American mathematician and computer scientist; Gerald Forsythe co-owner of Champ Car World Series and owner of the Forsythe Championship Racing Team
It was the first event for the new Champ Car World Series which was created when Gerald Forsythe, Kevin Kalkhoven, Paul Gentilozzi and Dan Petit purchased the bankrupt CART series' liquidated assets in an Indianapolis courtroom the previous January. Bruno Junqueira won the first Champ Car-era pole while Paul Tracy took the first win.
Three team owners who had participated in the CART series, Gerald Forsythe, Kevin Kalkhoven, and Paul Gentilozzi, purchased CART's liquidated assets and resurrected it as Open-Wheel Racing Series for the 2004 season. Frenchman Sébastien Bourdais would win his first of four consecutive drivers' title driving for Newman-Haas Racing
Supermodel reflected on her life in a new BBC podcast hosted by Kirsty Young
Moore entered into discussions with Forsythe Racing on June 30. [72] Team owner Gerald Forsythe made him an offer that was rejected because of monetary limitations. [73] In August 1999, Moore signed a $10 million three-year contract to replace Al Unser Jr. at Penske's CART team from 2000 onward alongside Gil De Ferran.