Cosworth Formula One era — 3 museum-grade prints from the period. Bruce McLaren won four Formula One Grands Prix as a driver and founded the team that became one of the sport's most successful constructors — yet he never won a world championship, which makes his founder-driver Spa 1968 victory the defining catalog fact. Born in Auckland, he moved to England and paired with Denny Hulme in a trans-Tasman alliance that brought Can-Am dominance alongside F1 respect. John Watson won five Formula One Grands Prix across Penske, Brabham, and McLaren — finishing third in the 1982 drivers' championship behind Keke Rosberg and Didier Pironi in a season defined by tragedy and turbo transition. His Detroit victory from seventeenth on the grid remains one of the sport's great comeback drives; the MP4/1's carbon-fibre construction pioneered by John Barnard changed how every subsequent chassis was built. François Cevert was France's brightest Formula One prospect of the early 1970s — elegant, photogenic, and fast enough to share a Tyrrell garage with three-time champion Jackie Stewart. His sole Grand Prix victory came at the 1971 United States Grand Prix; by 1973 he was widely tipped to inherit Stewart's seat and challenge for the title.