JUPITER, Fla. (Jan. 23) --
Michael Cordani, co-founder and CEO of FireIce and sponsor of numerous
professional and amateur NHRA drag racers, including world champion Jay Payne,
Jim Dunn, Tony Bartone, Sean Bellemeur, Darrell Gwynn, and Johnny Ahten, passed
away Tuesday after a three-year battle with cancer. He was 53.
The vibrant New Yorker, who later
moved to South Florida with his entire family, always enjoyed the sport of drag
racing and began attending events as a young man with his brothers Peter and
Billy. He later became involved with Gwynn's Top Fuel dragster team as an
associate sponsor, his first foray into corporate support of a racing team.
When GelTech's flagship product
FireIce, an environmentally friendly fire suppressant invented by his brother
Peter, began selling worldwide, he teamed with Dunn and Bartone in an effort to
spread the word. He then met and befriended Payne and in 2007 became the title
sponsor of his Top Alcohol Funny Car and various Pro Mod entries.
"We are all deeply and profoundly
saddened by Michael's passing," Payne said. "He was one of my closest and best
friends, and we're all going to miss him very much. I feel completely lucky to
have met Michael and had the years we had together. He was such a positive
person and gave us everything we ever needed.
"Quite frankly, his sponsorship
of the team was secondary to our friendship. Michael was adamant about using the
FireIce race cars as a heartfelt salute to the 1.1 million firefighters in this
country. He never wanted any credit. He deflected everything to the firefighters
and EMTs, and when you'd talk about the success of FireIce, he'd deflect that
praise to his brother and their employees. That's just the kind of guy he was.
I'm talking about a very, very special person."
Under Cordani's direction, Payne
routinely has hosted large groups of firefighters at the races. He has also
honored certain individual firefighters by putting their names on his race cars,
giving them unprecedented high-speed accolades.
"Drag racing was something
Michael just loved," Peter Cordani said. "He always had so much fun at the
races, and every time he went to one he wouldn't stop talking about it all week
long.
"As much as he loved the cars and
the speed, I think he loved the people that much more. I truly believe that his
friendships out there carried him through these last three years, which were
pretty hard at times. He always wanted to recover as fast as possible from his
treatments so he could get back to the dragstrip."
Cordani is survived by his wife
Darlene, daughters Allyssa and Christina, father Bill, mother Ann, and brother
Peter. He was preceded in death by his brother Billy.
Funeral services will be held at
10 a.m. ET, Saturday, at St. Edward's Catholic Church, located at 144 N. County
Road, Palm Beach, Fla.
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