Coincidentally, as the NASCAR boys of today head to the Irish Hills of Michigan for this weekend's event, our History Minute today will take us to that 2-mile track as well. Our story today does not include names such as Carl Edwards, Kyle Busch or Jimmie Johnson, but, instead, names like David Pearson, Richard Petty and Bobby Allison.
Forty cars entered, or at least qualified, for the event that Sunday afternoon, with Bobby Isaac in the K&K Dodge snagging the pole. Second place starter was Richard Petty in a Dodge, third was David Pearson in a Mercury and fourth was Bobby Allison in a Chevrolet. Pretty historic first four, huh?
Bobby Isaac would lead the first two laps before David Pearson would slip by. David led until lap 18 when Donnie Allison roared by for the lead. Two laps later, James Hylton would lead. In fact, for the first 55 laps, the lead would change every two or three laps between Isaac, Pearson, the Allison brothers, Hylton, and Petty. Finally, on lap 55, David established a lead he would hold until lap106 when Isaac took over again for one lap. The race then settled between Pearson, Bobby Allison and Petty. On lap 158, David took the lead he would hold, and continue to lengthen, to the end of the race.
In his Victory Lane interview, David said he had the fastest car by far, but even more important to his win was the exceptional pit work by the famed Wood Brothers. David said "I hardly had time to get a drink of water they are so fast".
This was Pearson's third win in 14 races for the 1972 season. Bobby Isaac departed the race on lap 147 when his suspension failed, and Donnie Allison and LeeRoy Yarbrough both fell out of the race with mechanical issues.
There were only two caution flags for a total of 12 laps which allowed Pearson to average 148.639 mph for the event witnessed by 33,000 fans.
Top five finishers were:
1. David Pearson, Wood Brothers Mercury, winning $12,935.00
2. Bobby Allison, Richard Howard Chevrolet, winning $8,980.00
3. Richard Petty, Petty Enterprises Dodge, winning $6,925.00
4. James Hylton, Hylton Engineering Ford, winning $3,360.00
5. Ron Keselowski, Roger Lubinski Dodge, winning $2,150.00
Sixth through tenth were Larry Smith, Dean Arnold, Ben Dalton, Buddy Arrington and Bill Champion. Cecil Gordon was 11th.Walter Ballard 12th and John Sears 13th. J. D. McDuffie finished 16th, Richard Childress 19th, Pete Hamilton 22nd, Jabe Thomas 24th. Benny Parsons took 25th position with Bobby Isaac 26th, Elmo Langley 29th and Dave Marcis 30th. Earl Brooks was 37th and Neil Castles 40th.
Honor the past, embrace the present, dream for the future.
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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