Sneha Girap (Editor)

John Whitmore (racing driver)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
English

Name
  
John Whitmore

Role
  
Racing driver


John Whitmore (racing driver) wwwihexcellenceorgimagesjohnsmjpg

Born
  
John Henry Douglas Whitmore 16 October 1937 (age 86) (
1937-10-16
)

1959–19661961–19631965
  
24 Hours of Le MansBritish Saloon Car ChampionshipEuropean Touring Car Championship

19611965
  
British Saloon Car ChampionshipEuropean Touring Car Championship

Education
  
Royal Agricultural University, Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, Eton College

Sir john whitmore interviewed by kate tojeiro


Sir John Henry Douglas Whitmore, 2nd Baronet (16 October 1937 – 28 April 2017) was a pioneer of the executive coaching industry, an author and British racing driver.

Contents

John Whitmore (racing driver) internationalcoachingcommunitycomwpcontentuplo

Jim clark s lotus cortina irs driven by sir john whitmore a


Family life & background

John Whitmore (racing driver) British Racing Drivers Club

Sir John was born 16 October 1937, the son of Sir Francis Whitmore and Ellis Johnsen. He was educated at Eton College, Sandhurst Royal Military Academy, and Cirencester Agricultural College. Sir John inherited The Orsett Estate Company at Orsett, Essex, in 1962, on the death of his father Sir Francis Henry Charlton Douglas Whitmore Bt. (1872–1962). The inheritance included the family seat, Orsett Hall, the grounds of which he used to take off and land his plane. In 1968, he sold the house to his friends, Tony and Val Morgan. He married twice, first to Ella Gunilla Hansson, divorcing in 1969, and later to Diana Becchetti. He has one child from each marriage, Tina Whitmore, born 1966 and Jason Whitmore, born 1983. He died on 28 April 2017.

Early career (in motor racing)

John Whitmore (racing driver) The Racing Baronet

In his first year in the competition, 1961, Whitmore won the British Saloon Car Championship in his BMC Mini Minor. In 1963 he drove again in the BSCC and came second in the championship in a Mini Cooper, finishing just two points behind Jack Sears. In 1965 he won the European Touring Car Championship in a Lotus Cortina (KPU392C). He won by finishing first in his class in 8 of the 9 1965 ETCC races (and finishing first overall in 6 of the races).

John Whitmore (racing driver) LEGENDARY DRIVERS Alan Mann Racing

Sir John drove in the 24 Hours of Le Mans for five years between 1959 and 1966. In the first year he finished second in class along with Jim Clark in a Lotus Elite. In 1965 and 1966 he raced in a works Ford GT40, but had to retire from the race both years with mechanical problems. At the end of 1966 he retired from racing. He returned later in life to driving in historic car events such as the Goodwood Revival.

Later career (in business & coaching)

John Whitmore (racing driver) Sir John Whitmore and Coaching Connect YouTube

After leaving racing and the world of motor-sports, he became interested in transpersonal psychology and its emphasis on the principle of will, intention, or responsibility. He went on to apply his learning and skills first to the world of sport and then to business. In 1970 he studied at the Esalen Institute in Big Sur, California, with the likes of William Schutz, creator of team development model FIRO-B, and then trained with Harvard educationalist and tennis expert Timothy Gallwey, who created the Inner Game methodology of performance coaching.

Sir John founded the Inner Game in Britain in 1979 with a small team of Inner Game coaches trained by Gallwey. Initially they coached tennis players and golfers but soon realized the value of the Inner Game for leaders and managers of organizations. Sir John spent much of the 1980s developing the methodology, concepts, and techniques for performance improvement in organizations and showed it was possible to improve performance, increase learning and enjoyment, and find a sense of purpose in work.

Sir John is regarded as a pioneer in the field of business coaching. Along with Tim Gallwey, Laura Whitworth and Thomas J. Leonard, he is credited with launching modern coaching in the 1970s. For some people, Sir John will always be best known as the co-creator of the GROW model, one of the most established and successful coaching models. He presented at numerous conferences around the world and contributed to many other books such as Challenging Coaching and Coaching at Work.

In the 1990s Sir John was a co-founder, along with Eric Parsloe, David Clutterbuck, David Megginson and Julie Hay, of the European Mentoring and Coaching Council.

In 2004 he founded Performance Consultants International, a provider of coaching, leadership development and performance improvement.

Sir John was involved with the Professional and Personal Coaches Association (PPCA), an organization that merged in 1998 with the International Coach Federation (ICF). He served as a Trustee for the ICF Foundation until his death in 2017.

Awards

His racing career awards are listed separately on this page. In his role as one of the coaching industry's founders and leading authors, Sir John has won a number of awards including:

  • A Lifetime Achievement Award from the International Association of Coaching ("IAC") in 2013, presented to him by the IAC President, Krishna Kumar; and
  • In 2007 Sir John received the International Coach Federation's President's Award for advancing the profession of coaching.
  • Media coverage

    Sir John has been interviewed numberous times. Some examples include:

  • By Coaching at Work magazine
  • At the European Commission
  • In Coaching Magazine
  • In a book titled Coaching: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice
  • References

    John Whitmore (racing driver) Wikipedia