Yes, it is true. We are visiting Martinsville often during the month of April, and, as the coming months unfold, we will find repeat visits to many tracks. This happens, of course, because NASCAR has managed to keep certain race dates at certain tracks within certain months. Enough "certains" for you? In the world of NASCAR racing there is not much "certain" so I feel good about using the word often in this opening statement.
Today we are going back to 1961. In honor of Chase and his "Petty History", I stayed away from Darlington, 1966! In 1961, NASCAR and Martinsville encouraged the entry of convertibles as well as hardtops in the "Virginia 500 Sweepstakes". Of the thirty entries showing up for the race, eight were convertibles. I know the 1959 Daytona 500 combined convertibles with the hardtops, and that convertibles continued to run Darlington in the spring through 1962, but a quick reference search this morning didn't show me any races after Daytona that combined the two cars. With the exception of Darlington, the convertible series virtually faded away after the 1959 season.
Rex White started on the pole in his hardtop Chevy with Fred Lorenzen second in his hardtop Ford. Buck Baker was the highest convertible qualifier, starting 5th in his big '61 Chrysler. Rex White took the lead from the start, but he was dogged, lap after lap, by Fred Lorenzen until lap 32 when Freddie blew around the gold and white Chevy to put the Ford in front. Fred would hold that lead, through pit stops and everything else, until lap 365 when the fast Ford developed engine problems forcing him to pit for 37 laps. Junior Johnson, running second to Lorenzen at the time, was four laps back. When Lorenzen's engine was repaired, he returned to the track and was burning up the asphalt eventually making up two laps under the green flag to finish 11th.
Junior, as was his style, was flat-footing his Holly Farms Pontiac, owned by Rex Lovette. Junior had a four lap lead and Lovette had the crew repeatedly flashing the "E Z" instruction on the blackboard (communication with driver before radio) but Johnson refused to lessen his pace. On the last pit stop, Lovette met Junior in the pits with a sledge hammer and told him if he blew this race with his hard driving, he was going to get up close and personal with that sledge hammer. Although he wasn't happy about it, Junior backed off a little and proceeded to win the race with a four lap cushion over second place Emanuel Zervakis. Zervakis was driving a convertible so it appears the mixing of the two types worked out for Martinsville.
Top five finishers were:
1. Junior Johnson, Holly Farms Pontiac, winning $2,315.00
2. Emanuel Zervakis, Monroe Shook Chevrolet, winning $1,200.
3. Fireball Roberts, Smokey Yunick Pontiac, winning $825.00
4. Tommy Irwin, Tom Daniels Chevrolet, winning $625.00
5. Buck Baker, Baker Chrysler Convertible, winning $550.00
Sixth through tenth were Ned Jarrett in a convertible, Tim Flock, Harry Leake, Rex White and Nelson Stacy.
As already written above, Lorenzen was 11th. Others of note were Herman Beam 12th, G.C. Spencer 13th, Doug Yates 14th, Wendell Scott 15th, Johnny Allen 16th, Glen Wood 22nd, Richard Petty 23rd, Curtis Crider 24th, PAUL LEWIS 26th, Reb Wickersham 28th and Fred Harb 29th.
Some 16,000 fans witnessed the race. The caution flag was waved only once for six laps. Pretty good for 500 laps on that track, huh?
Honor the past, embrace the present, dream for the future
5.
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What a change! It's been awhile since I've checked in and I'm quite surprised. It may take me awhile to figure it our but first look it's really great.
updated by @tim-leeming: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM