We
are honored to include Manny Esquerra, of Parker, Arizona with the class of 2008
inductees in the Competition: Off-Road Racing category. Throughout his
career, which spanned over three decades, Manny earned countless race wins and a
dozen major series championships. Some of his many wins include the Parker 400,
thirteen times, the Mint 400, twelve times, the Frontier 500 five times, the
Baja 500 five times and was a six-time winner of the Baja 1000. Esquerra was
voted driver of the year in the SCORE Desert Series in 1980 and 81 and won the
coveted Toyota “True Grit” award in 1986, which is awarded to those few drivers
who complete every mile of every race in a season. Known for his easy going
manner and an ever-present smile, Manny was not only a legendary driver but a
mentor who always seemed to have time to work with the younger generations of
aspiring racers in and around his home town of Parker, Arizona.
Much of his success behind the
wheel was done under the watchful eye of ORMHOF member and legendary team owner,
Bill Stroppe, who hired Manny as a contract driver to pilot his Class 7 Ford
Ranger trucks in 1981. During the ten years that followed, Stroppe and Esquerra
became good friends and one of the most formidable teams in off-road racing
history. Manny helped to develop the Ford Ranger brand and was supported by many
national sponsors whose brands everyone will recognize. Companies like 7-11,
Chief Auto Parts, Ford Motor Company, Firestone Tires, Motorcraft, BF Goodrich
and Coors Brewing Company were some of his many sponsors over the years. Later,
as part of the Rough Rider team, Manny and Stroppe had the support of the best
in the sport and were part of an elite group of racing teams that may never be
duplicated. The Rough Rider teams were some of the best in off-road racing and
all capable of winning any race they entered. Support from major brands like
Ford Motor Company, BFGoodrich, Texaco and others made the Rough Riders the
first large coordinated joint marketing program in off-road racing and has yet
to be equaled in scope.
You could find Manny and his winning Ford Ranger in numerous nationally
circulated magazine ads and articles during the eighties and nineties. Manny’s
face was everywhere promoting off-road motorsports and his sponsor’s products.
These focused marketing efforts raised the public awareness level of our sport
with Manny at the core of these programs. If his success as a driver was Manny’s
principle accomplishment, that would easily qualify him for induction into the
Off-Road Motorsports Hall of Fame but his legacy is greater than his driving
skill alone. Manny was always known for his competitive nature and could beat
the competition in many different ways but he was always gracious in victory and
in defeat. He was known for his compassion toward others and was known to have
returned to the course after he had finished to help a fellow competitor get to
the finish line. Manny was a teacher and mentor to a number of race teams and
drivers that have risen to the top of the sport because of his guidance and
consul.
As Cliff Irey of Ford Truck Motorsports recently said, “Manny lived as a model
for the up and coming. He made ours a better world, serving as a coach,
counselor and advisor. Manny thought out of the box; never to be bothered by
small problems, he lived life to the fullest, seemingly with never a harsh
thought. He was a great ambassador for off-road racing”.
Manny passed from an apparent heart attack doing what he loved to do; driving a
Ford truck during the second lap of the Parker 425 on February 2, 2008. Shortly
after his untimely death, a group of close friends gathered in the desert, near
the spot where Manny drew his final breath and constructed a monument in
concrete and steel. The plaque reads:
King of the Desert
Manny Esquerra
2/2/08....Makin’ Tracks
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