Originally Posted by wedge 
I've recently been watching old IMSA races and had suddenly realised Holbert never featured in the late 1980s and early 90s and just discovered he died tragically in a plane accident after leaving a race meeting - RIP.
I know he dabbled in NASCAR and Indycar but it was at IMSA sportcars where he truly excelled and was a great driver. Watching him race has left me awestruck because he was usually the class of the field, often driving by himself with no driver changes - the Ironman!
Even though he was a multiple winner at Le Mans and was part of the Porsche dream team of Derek Bell and Hans Stuck, I get the feeling this guy was well and truly under-rated never got the recognition/limelight he truly deserves.
I have only seen a mid-race segment feature of him and he instantly reminded me of Jim Clark - soft spoken, humble and down to earth.
Can our brethren across the Atlantic tell me more about Al Holbert? Are there any good stories to tell?
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His father was a well known, in U.S. racing forty plus years ago, racer.
Al came up during the time when many U.S. racing rags were crying puppy dog tears with loss of their heros-Donohue, Revson, Follmer, Jones, etc. from the Trans-Am to be replaced with "unknowns" such as Greenwood, Holbert, Holmes, Shafer, Agor etc. in the Trans-Am and new upstart IMSA.
The fact that the fans did not stop attending races, and the racing was as good or better than ever finally forced the racing press to give Holbert and the others the credit they deserved, but it took a few years.
Holbert died when he was in his prime, but the fact he was not a F-1 or CART car star, meant he was not a world renowned name inspite of his success.