When you read the report from my source (Greg Fielden's "Forty Years of Stock Car Racing") you would be confused if you read the finishing order before the actual report. In the finishing order, the 28th and last place finisher is credited with 200 laps, the official distance of the 100 mile race on the half-mile dirt track. However, first place finisher is credited with 199 laps, one lap short of the scheduled distance. All of this took place at Greenville-Pickens Speedway in South Carolina.
When qualifying was over, Bob Welborn in his own Chevrolet, won the pole with a speedof 58.037 mph. Tim Flock would start his Mercury Outboards Chrysler second with Joe Eubanks in a Chevy third, Jim Massey in the Hubert Westmoreland Chevy fourth and Jack Smith in yet another Chevy starting fifth.
The story of the race is Jim Reed in a "homemade Chevy", who came south from Peekskill, NY to run NASCAR Grand National. Tim Flock had been leading in his Carl Kiekhaefer "big bucks" Chrysler for most of the race but as the laps were drawing to a close, Reed caught the flying Flock and took over the point. The checkered flag waved abovve the number 7 Chevy and Reed pulled up in front of the stands to celebrate the win. Almost immediately, Kiekhaefer protested Reed's win. In Kiekhaefer's mind there was no way an upstart driver in a "junk" Chevy was going to beat his star driver in the immaculate Chrysler. Sure enough, when NASCAR finished its inspection, the Reed Chevy was determined to have "illegal" heads, or, as NASCAR stated in its official explanation, "non-stock heads".
This was the third time in NASCAR's Grand National History that a winner had been disqualified. Remember, it happened in the very first race. Second time it happened, it was Tim Flock who was disqualified. This time Flock benefitted. When the checkers waved, Flock was actually one lap behind Reed so the winner of the 200 lap event only completed 199 laps. There were 8,000 fans in attendance for the race that saw only one caution flag which allowed the average race speed to come in at 57.942 mph, just slightly slower than the pole winning speed. No mention is made of whether that speed was determined by 200 or 199 laps.
Top Five finishers were:
1. Tim Flock, Mercury Outboards Chrysler, winning $1,100.00
2. Junior Johnson, Bob Welborn Chevrolet, winning $700.00 (2 laps down)
3. Bob Welborn, Welborn Chevrolet, winning $475.00 (2 laps down)
4. Jim Massey, Westmoreland Chevrolet, winning $365.00 (2 laps down)
5. Buck Baker, DePaolo Ford, winning $310.00 (2 laps down)
Sixth through tenth were Jimmy Thompson, Bill Widenhouse, Jack Smith, Jimmie Lewallen, and Lee Petty. Dink Widenhouse would finish 11th, Jim Paschal 22nd,
Fonty Flock 25th, and Gwyn Staley 27th. Reed is shown as disqualified and credited with NO laps and received NO money.
SIDEBAR ON GREENVILLE-PICKENS: The actual first live telecast of flag-to-flag coverage of a race was NOT the 1979 Daytona 500 as some would ask you to believe but was, instead, a 1971 event from Greenville-Pickens shown on ABC. Bobby Isaac won that event.
Also, Greenville-Pickens was the track where so many of the stars of NASCAR's Late Model Sportsman Division gained their experience. Last time I was up there, the names of the track champions over the years were painted on the wall around the track. An impressive list of NASCAR stars to say the least. I hope that wall is still there and still contains those names. Would be worth a trip back just to see if the names are still there.
Greenville-Pickens is often used as a "test track" for today's Cup drivers. You never know when Jeff Gordon will be testing there, or Ryan Newman, or many others. It is a great half-mile asphalt track and is super fast.
PERSONAL NOTES: I attended several Grand National races there over the years. I never, however, raced there. My schedule was Columbia on Thursday, Savannah on Friday and Augusta on Saturday. When Augusta closed down, we went to Myrtle Beach Speedway because it was a short haul from Savannah. Often times I wish I had run at Greenville-Pickens at least once. It is certainly a track with a long and historic background.
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