April 25, 1971: A controversial win for Richard Petty

TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
13 years ago
4,073 posts

The King led about 20% of the 1971 Virginia 500. But near the end, NASCAR officials swallowed their whistle, looked the other way, held the black flag, dragged their toes in an arc in the sand, and shrugged their shoulders asking "huh? um... what? who? " as RP won the race with his gas cap clearly not attached - a supposed violation of the rules. Blog includes good first hand commentary from Petty lifer and RR member, Brian Hauck.

http://bench-racing.blogspot.com/2012/04/april-25-this-day-in-petty-history.html




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Schaefer: It's not just for racing anymore.

updated by @tmc-chase: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
11 years ago
4,073 posts

Two years ago, I posted a brief intro & link to my blog post about Richard Petty's win at Martinsville on April 25, 1971. I thought I'd bring it back with expanded text and pics.

Starting third, Richard Petty leads 118 laps - including the final 88 - and wins the Virginia 500 at Martinsville for his 127th career NASCAR Winston Cup win.

Source: Motor Racing Programme Covers

Donnie Allison dominated the race in his debut start in the famed Wood Brothers #21 Ford. He won the pole and led 367 of the 500 laps before losing an engine. Once Allison parked his car, Petty went to the point and stayed there until the checkers fell... with only a minor bitof controversy afterwards. - Article from Southern Motorsports Journal courtesy of Jerry Bushmire

Schaefer Ring of Honor Member and Petty Fan Lifer, Brian Hauck remembers:

I believe I was off from school on Spring Break because my family and I would not have been able to take in a Sunday race in Martinsville and make it back to New Jersey in time for Monday work/school. I remember we stayed in one of those little, flat roof, all-rooms-in-a-row, one floor, road side motels. We arrived there on Saturday and rented the room with no reservation in Martinsville on a race weekend. We parked next to the Speedway on the rolling hillsides right next to the duck pond! If you have never been to Martinsville, there is a duckpond to the left side of the track. The ducks have worn a path in the grass from traversing back and forth to the pond. Just another part of the charm of Martinsville Speedway.

Richard started from the 3rd position. While he was fast, it just seemed like he did not have anything for Donnie Allison. Allison was driving the Wood Brothers Mercury, and it was on a rail. After a round of pit stops, Richard seemed to get a handle on the track, and he and Allison raced side-by-side for 12 laps! There was a lot of rubbing, but neither driver made a dirty move. I think by racing Allison hard Richard caused Allison to overwork the car, and later on the engine gave up the ghost. With the only real competition gone, it looked as if Richard had this one in the bag!

Richard pitted under green right near the end and blew out of the pits without the gas cap secured. I saw it dangling as he exited pit row as we were seated right near the first turn. My heart sunk because I knew that was a rule violation and SURELY he would be black-flagged. As he came down the front stretch, NO black flag was shown. No radio headset or scanners in those days, and you could not hear the PA announcer once the cars started! What was going on? Is it possible NASCAR had not seen the cap? NO WAY!!! You could see it dangling on the safety wire EVERY LAP!! The white and the checkers were shown to Richard, and I knew surely it was in ERROR or most certainly after the race Pearson would be declared the winner! We went pitside after the race, and there seemed to be a lot of commotion. But Victory Lane ceremonies had been completed, and the teams were packing up. As we left Virginia, for the first time in my life, I felt some favoritism had been shown toward the King. The newspaper articles show the King was the winner that day, but to ME right and wrong had been clouded!

It is an interesting footnote that this race was run with only one, YES ONE caution flag! Martinsville and one caution flag DO NOT go together in the same sentence. Maybe another reason the outcome remained the same. The other thing is once again, the cars had run restrictor plates on a half-mile track !! At that time, it was NASCAR's way of handicapping the high-dollar teams to help the independent drivers. Also the first STP Plymouth was in this race, and it was driven by Fred Lorenzen. It was entirely STP day-glo red and looked like it was neon in the bright, Virginia sun!!

Next 4 pics from Brian Hauck

Southern Motorsports Journal picture and race report from Jerry Bushmire.
Fin Driver Car
1 Richard Petty '71 Plymouth
2 David Pearson '71 Ford
3 Bobby Isaac '71 Dodge
4 Dave Marcis '69 Dodge
5 James Hylton '70 Ford
6 Bobby Allison '71 Dodge
7 Cecil Gordon '69 Mercury
8 Ron Keselowski '70 Dodge
9 Neil Castles '70 Dodge
10 Bill Seifert '71 Ford
11 Roy Mayne '69 Chevrolet
12 Elmo Langley '70 Ford
13 Henley Gray '69 Ford
14 Bill Dennis '69 Ford
15 Donnie Allison '71 Mercury
16 Benny Parsons '70 Ford
17 Wendell Scott '69 Ford
18 Jabe Thomas '70 Plymouth
19 J.D. McDuffie '69 Mercury
20 Fred Lorenzen '71 Plymouth
21 John Sears '69 Dodge
22 Larry Baumel '69 Ford
23 Dick Brooks '70 Dodge
24 Bill Champion '71 Ford
25 Walter Ballard '71 Ford
26 Dub Simpson '69 Chevrolet
27 Earl Brooks '69 Ford
28 Bill Shirey '69 Plymouth
29 Frank Warren '69 Plymouth
30 Ed Negre '69 Plymouth



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Schaefer: It's not just for racing anymore.
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
11 years ago
9,137 posts

Sports anchor copy for Roanoke, Virginia's WSLS-TV Monday news report on the race:

And here's a link to a pre-race WSLS-TV video feature interview with a very long haired Fred Lorenzen discussing his return to stock car racing at Martinsville and rumors of cheating by Richard Petty:

http://search.lib.virginia.edu/catalog/uva-lib:2254637

And, here's a link to a pre-race interview with the winner:

http://search.lib.virginia.edu/catalog/uva-lib:2285519




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"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"