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VITOR MEIRA:

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 - Up Close
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 - Indy Car Team

 

 
 

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Vitor at home with his wife Adriana and their daughter Luiza

 

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Vitor poses with Quatro, his mini-Schnauzer dog

 

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Vitor competes in the Pucon, Chile Ironman Triathlon

 

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Vitor does a limited workout last summer while recovering from back injury

 

Vitor & his wife Adriana at the beach....Click here to enlarge
Vitor & his wife Adriana at the beach

 

Vitor - Triathlon 2009....Click here to enlarge

 

Vitor - Indy 2009....Click here to enlarge

 

Vitor at the regional karting series in 1994 ....Click here to enlarge
Vitor at the regional karting series in 1994

 

Vitor getting his Indy 500 check for finishing 2nd in 2008....Click here to enlarge
Vitor getting his Indy 500 check for finishing 2nd in 2008

 

Vitor as motorsports’ first Special Olympics Ambassador....Click here to enlarge
Vitor as motorsports’ first Special Olympics Ambassador

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Biography:

Full Name: VITOR MEIRA
Birthdate: March 27, 1977
Wife: Adriana
Daughter: Luiza
Hometown: Brasilia, Brazil
Height/Weight: 5' 7"/141 lbs.
Residence Miami
 

VITOR MEIRA


Vitor Meira is often described as the best IndyCar driver yet to win a race. And the “yet” is very important because those in the know realize it’s not a matter of if, it’s a matter of when.

A.J. Foyt believes that Meira’s time is now.

Meira joined Foyt’s ABC Supply Racing team this year as Super Tex looks to return to victory lane after coming ever so close in 2008. Foyt firmly believes Meira can get the job done. Meira has come very close on numerous occasions: he has eight runner-up finishes with two different teams, including two in the Indianapolis 500 in the last four years.

Quiet and unassuming, Meira describes himself as ‘a normal guy with a cool job.’ He is anything but a normal guy.  Indeed, watching him drive a race car is at once thrilling and inspiring. Single-minded and focused, Meira has earned the respect of his peers with his race craft and the admiration of his fans with his hard-charging, no-holds-barred style. 

“My goal is to win, and by that I mean to give 100% no matter what is happening,” said Meira. “I finished second many times but there were races where I finished fourth or fifth and I felt good about them because I gave 100% and we got the most out of the car that day.  Whether it’s in races or in the championship, if we are getting top-fives, it’s because we are putting ourselves in position to win which is what you have to do before you can win. Then the wins will come."

A.J. Foyt puts it more simply: Vitor gives 110% all the time.

“He is hustling all the time, even when the car isn’t 100%,” said Foyt. “Sometimes that got him into trouble because it’s hard to carry these cars, but I like his attitude. I believe our team can give him the car he needs to win races,” said Foyt, IndyCar’s all-time winning driver. “He has the focus, drive and talent that separate the good drivers from the great ones.”

Meira would certainly count Foyt among the great ones. He admired his new boss long before he came to work for him.

“A.J. is one driver who has seen it all and has won in everything,” said Meira. “We were talking in his office one day and he told me about racing with [Juan Manuel] Fangio and Jim Clark and it blew me away because I had no idea he’d done that. He has done so much and yet he still has the curiosity, the interest in racing after all these years. Amazing.”

Meira may not approach Foyt’s record for longevity which includes 35 straight starts at Indy, but he is certainly the best IndyCar driver looking for his first victory.

In 93 career starts, Meira has won two pole positions, led 424 laps and posted 27 top-five finishes, including two second-place finishes in the Indianapolis 500 in 2005 and in 2008. He claimed 56 top-10 finishes and earned over $6 million in prize money.

However, when Meira broke into the IndyCar Series in August, 2002, it was run entirely on oval tracks. It was a daunting career switch for a driver who grew up on the road circuits of South America and honed his craft on Europe’s historic road courses while still a teenager.

“That was at a crucial point in my career,” Meira revealed. “I was very apprehensive because I had to make a decision to either keep trying or forget about it and get a job. I had to try to make it work, but I was very apprehensive about my future. Getting into Indycar racing was one thing, but being able to do it for a living was another thing.

“It was so different from what I’d done—it was so much more intense,” Meira recalled. “By the end of the race I felt exhausted mentally and physically compared to previous races I’d done. The races on the ovals were so close and so nerve-wracking back then, I was freaking out.”

How did he do it?

“When the races were about to start, I’d ask myself the same thing,” said Meira, chuckling. “For instance at Texas, nobody says good luck to you; they all say ‘Be safe.’ Sometimes it’s madness out there.

“You have to shut that off…everyone gets scared. A.J. has said that if you aren’t scared you aren’t driving hard enough. But some guys control it better than others and we have to. We do it because we love to do it. I’ve been driving for a long time, so now I know what to expect and what to do when things happen.”

Of course sometimes even the most experienced drivers find themselves a hapless passenger. Meira went flying in the ABC Supply/AJ Foyt 225 at Milwaukee last year when there was a two-car crash ahead of him coming off turn two on the one mile oval. He attempted to avoid it but couldn’t when Marco Andretti spun into Meira’s path. He rode over Andretti’s left front wheel launching Meira into the air and completely over Andretti.

“Getting airborne wasn’t that bad, it’s landing that caused all the problems,” Meira quipped afterwards. Fortunately, Meira and Andretti both walked away from that one.

And that one wasn’t among his top three most memorable races! No those honors belong understandably to the two Indy 500s in which he finished second (2005 to Dan Wheldon and 2008 to Scott Dixon) and to the 2004 race at Kansas Speedway where he lost by five thousandths of a second to his teammate Buddy Rice!

“My third most memorable race? It had to be Kansas in 2004—up to last year it was the second-closest finish in IndyCar history and it was the closest I ever came to winning,” said Meira, who was driving for the Rahal-Letterman team.  “We had been leading but we had a clutch problem on the green flag pit stops so Buddy Rice was able to overtake me and in the last ten laps, we went back and forth trading the lead. I was on the outside and lost by three inches. We were teammates—I raced him more fair (maybe didn’t squeeze him as much) because for the team it didn’t matter who won. The worse thing would have been if we both crashed going for the win.  I would never do that.”

Prior to his IndyCar career, Meira had his sights set on Formula One, a natural goal for a young race driver whose native Brazil was home to one of F-1’s greatest drivers Ayrton Senna.  Senna was a hero to Meira and an inspiration for his career.

“I had admired him because of his will, his determination,” said Meira who was driving go-karts at the time Senna was killed in 1994. “He wanted to win through his own efforts. He was always challenging himself to be better than everyone else but mostly he was challenging himself to be better than he was.”

Meira’s racing career began with a go-kart—his “favorite present ever received”-- from his parents when he was 11 years old. Initially, it was just for fun but others soon realized he had a talent for it.

“I liked it straight away,” said Meira, “but as a kid of 12 or 13 years old, you can’t really say, ‘Oh that’s what I’m going to do for the rest of my life.’  I knew I liked it a lot and I was having a lot of fun and I was going to keep doing it until I was not having fun anymore. And the feeling is still the same.”

Meira won the Brazilian championship and was runner-up in the South American title run. At 17, he moved to England to compete in the British Formula Ford Series, placing fourth in 1996 and 1997. The next year he moved up to the British Formula Renault Series where he finished fifth.  In 1999, he competed in the South American F3 Series where he won the rookie of the year title. The next year, he won eight races and the title and landed a ride in the European F3000 Series in 2001.

“My first year in F3000 in Europe, I raced against the likes of Felipe Massa [current F-1 driver for Ferrari] who was in his second year and he won the title,” said Meira, who finished fifth that year.  “For me, it was a good year for a first year and I was very encouraged going into the second year. But the championship had only eight races and in three of the first four races, I had retired with mechanical problems. In F-3000, if you don’t win in the first year, you have to win in the second year, otherwise you have no chance of doing what you want. So at that point I knew my championship was done.  Half the series was done so I had no real hope to win the championship so I took the rest of the sponsorship money I had and came here to America and tried to sort something out and luckily that came around.”

The Brazilian’s IndyCar career began in August, 2002 when he drove for the Menard team; three races and two months later, he won the pole and finished third in the season finale at Texas Motor Speedway.

He continued with Menard the next year driving a partial season and was awarded the IRL’s first Rising Star Award given in honor of the late Tony Renna. In 2004, he joined the Rahal-Letterman team for two seasons. He finished in the top-10 in the driver standings both years, capping 2005 by finishing second to Dan Wheldon in the Indy 500.  

In 2006, he moved to Panther Racing and achieved his highest points ranking to date—fifth place behind the Penske and Ganassi teams. He drove for Panther Racing for two more years before being released at the end of 2008, the same season in which he finished second in the Indy 500 again, this time winning a record $1.273,215 million for that single result. His performance also garnered him the Scott Brayton Driver Trophy at the 500 Victory Celebration.

Meira didn’t spend much time as a free agent because he was quickly signed by Foyt for 2009. Both men hold the utmost respect for each other and together they plan to make this season the most memorable one to date for the ABC Supply Racing team.

Meira, who married his beautiful childhood sweetheart Adriana Schettini in March, 2008, moved from Indianapolis to Miami during the winter.

“The weather is better year-round in Miami which makes it easier for me to train outdoors which I prefer,” said Meira, who is in top physical shape. “It’s also much easier for my wife to fly back to Brazil to visit family.”

When not racing, Meira likes to compete in triathlons which are athletic contests in which participants compete without stopping in three successive events: long-distance swimming, bicycling and running. He admits that the swimming portion of the contest is his weakest, describing himself as an average swimmer.

He is also a regular competitor in the Mini-Marathon at Indy in May. As part of his workout regimen, he runs, usually warming up with his dog “Quattro,” a year-old mini Schnauzer, for ten minutes. With Quattro safely back home in the apartment, Meira then does his workout run. His regimen includes daily visits to the gym (takes off one weekend day) and he alternates between cycling and running shifter karts in the afternoon at a local track to balance out the gym workout.

Meira’s activities aren’t limited to racing and triathlons because he is quite interested in charitable work. He is a Special Olympics ambassador and holds a Brasilia Ambassador award.

Reflecting on his IndyCar career and the changes that have taken place over the last seven years, Meira noted that he has changed, but not in the way one would think about a very successful IndyCar driver.

“I don’t think I’ve changed that much—not in the way I try and sometimes over-try,” he said with a smile. “But I did get better on thinking more during the race and thinking further ahead in the race. What hasn’t changed is that I have to leave the race happy with myself— and the only way to do that is to do the best I can no matter what the circumstances.”

A.J. Foyt won’t ask for anything more.

 
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