Veteran Historic Sportscar Racing competitor Jack Lewis will celebrate 50 years of racing success at Daytona International Speedway this week in the HSR Classic Daytona presented by IMSA. The premier North American vintage and historic 24-hour sports car race will run for the seventh time at the “World Center of Racing,” October 27-31.
Lewis debuted at Daytona in 1971 at the age of 21, driving a 1955 Porsche Speedster in an IMSA support race. It was the first of a string of ongoing visits to the high-banked road course over the next five decades that have seen Lewis amass a solid record of success in both contemporary and vintage and historic racing competition at DIS.
Driving his Jack Lewis Enterprises 1974 No. 9 Porsche 911 RSR (pictured at top), Lewis competes in both the HSR Classic Daytona this Saturday and Sunday and the accompanying HSR Daytona Historics events that set the stage for the classic 24-hour race from Thursday on.
“All of us at HSR want to congratulate Jack and his wife Helga (pictured with Lewis above in 1991) on 50 years of racing at Daytona International Speedway and an amazing competition career that shows no signs of slowing down,” said HSR President David Hinton. “At age 71, [Jack] is still a threat for the podium every time he takes a green flag, and we at HSR are honored to know and race with him.”
Lewis’ Golden Anniversary is fittingly framed by the famous Porsche Gold Crest on a weekend that also celebrates Porsche as the Featured Marque of the 2021 HSR Classic Daytona. The Norcross, Georgia resident has driven nothing but Porsches at Daytona the last 50 years.
“The 50 years went by in no time, but at times it was dreadfully hard to keep it going,” Lewis said. “I’m most grateful to my wife, Helga, for supporting all my efforts and for my good health and having the abilities that allow me to do this. Looking back now, I’ve always been able to live my dream.”
In addition to vintage and historic racing achievements, Lewis has an accomplished resume of contemporary competition success and race wins at Daytona. He ran four Daytona 250 night races in the Grand American Road Racing (Grand-Am) era in the early 2000s, boosting his total professional starts at Daytona to 22.
“My most memorable race at Daytona (pictured above) was the Daytona 250 on the July 4, 2002 weekend with NASCAR,” Lewis said. “The Grand-Am sports car race was on Friday night after NASCAR Cup qualifying. I started next to Tony Stewart and won the GT race. My son, Mike, was the rear tire changer. It was our second Grand-Am win in our Porsche GT3, having won the Watkins Glen 6 Hour the week before. All a dream come true for me!”
Lewis made his first Rolex 24 start in 1982, driving with Bob Beasley and George Stone in a Porsche 911 RSR (pictured below). He drove the same Porsche at Daytona in July’s Paul Revere 250 later that year and again in the Rolex 24 from 1983-1986 and in 1988.
He returned to Daytona for the 24 hour in 1992 through 1998 driving Jack Lewis Enterprises-prepared Porsches, except in 1995 when he drove for Alex Job Racing. In 1999, he drove with fellow HSR standout Kevin Wheeler in a JLE/KMW Motorsports prepared Porsche RSR. He also partnered in Rolex 24 efforts with David Murry (2002), fellow HSR competitor Tom McGlynn (2004) and Steve Bernheim (2005).
Lewis was the 1995 IMSA Driver of the Year in addition to garnering HSR Driver of the Year honors in 1991 and a full 20 years later in 2011. The first HSR driver honor was fueled in part by Lewis winning the inaugural Vintage Rolex Endurance Championship in 1991.
His most recent HSR podium appearances were earned just last month in the HSR Fall Historics at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta. He drove the No. 9 RSR to second-place overall and Porsche-class finishes in that event’s HSR Sasco Sports International/American Challenge race, and claimed another runner-up honor in the HSR Classic RS Cup race.
This weekend marks the fourth HSR Classic 24 start for Lewis, all in his IROC-themed 1974 No. 9 RSR, which is a continuation of the same Porsche in which he made his Rolex 24 debut nearly 40 years ago in 1982.
“My association with HSR began in the 1980s,” Lewis said. “Now, here we are, at 50 years and circling back!”
This year’s HSR Classic Daytona features seven different Run Groups competing in succession for a full 24 hours on the iconic 3.56-mile road course. The various period-correct classes within each Run Group combine to make just about any closed-wheel competition sports car from the last 60 years eligible for the race.
Information on the 2021 HSR Classic Daytona and the accompanying HSR Daytona Historics, including the event schedule and much more, can be found by clicking HERE.
For the entry list, click HERE.