Race number ONE of the 1970 season was the Motor Trend 500 contested on the reconfigured road course at Riverside. The previously 2.7 mile track requiring 186 laps to make up 500 miles was now 2.62 miles and would require 193 laps to get the job done. Dan Gurney (remember him) this time driving a Petty Engineering Plymouth Superbird rather than a Wood Brothers entry, won the pole with a speed of 112.060 while David Pearson in the Holman-Moody Ford would start second. Third place starter was A.J. Foyt in a Jack Bowsher Ford, fourth place Bobby Allison in a Mario Rossi Dodge and fifth place LeeRoy Yarbrough in a Junior Johnson Ford. Fastest qualifier was actually Parnelli Jones at 113.310 mph in Wood Brothers Mercury. The situation with Jones was that he, being a Firestone Tire Dealer had brought in some special tires on which to qualify, tires the other competitors could not get. AFTER qualifying, NASCAR determined the tires were not generally available to all competitors so Parnelli was forced to start at the rear of the field.
It would seem that the ruling against Jones only served to inspire a charge to the front like Riverside had not before seen. By lap 43 he was leading the race and was pulling away until his clutch failed on lap 168 putting him out of the race.
Pearson led the first 25 laps before Ford led one and then it was Petty for 2 laps. Pearson, Yarbrough, Foyt and Jones swapped the lead back and forth until Donnie Allison slipped in to lead laps from 45 to 64 before giving way to Foyt. Pearson, Yarbrough, and Jones traded the lead back and forth until Jones went in front on lap 111 and was flying away from the field. On lap 168, the Jones Mercury lost the clutch and he was out. With Jones sitting behind the wall, A.J. Foyt went to the front and the rest of the race was his. Finally, he must have thought, he had won at Riverside.
There were two very severe crashes in the race. Buddy Young, a first time starter and driving for L. G. DeWitt, flipped end over end just past the start finish line after Dick Brooks had coated the track with oil after blowing an engine. Young suffered a concussion and internal injuries in the accident.
On lap 94, veteran driver Jim Cook, a 48 year old Nowalk, California driver, tried to avoid a pile up and hit the concrete wall head on. His Ford was bent double and the transmission was thrown a hundred yards from the wrecked car. Jim was airlifted to the hospital with multiple head injuries and both arms and legs broken.
A crowd of 43,200 saw A.J. Foyt earn his third NASCAR victory and his first since 1965. He average 97.450 mph for the race.
FINISHING ORDER:
1. A. J. Foyt, Jack Bowsher Ford, winning $19,700.00
2. Roger McCluskey, Norm Nelson Plymouth, winning $9,000.00(3.5 second back)
3. LeeRoy Yarbrough, Junior Johnson Ford, winning $6,275.00
4. Donnie Allison, Banjo Matthews Ford, winning $4,475.00 (3 laps back)
5. Richard Petty, Petty Enterprises Plymouth, winning $3,000.00 (7 laps back)
6. Dan Gurney, Petty Enterprises Plymouth
7. Neil Castles
8. Friday Hassler
9. Jerry Oliver
10. Dick Gulstrand
11. Parnelli Jones
12. Kevin Terris
13.Bobby Allison
14. Dave Marcis
15. Sam Rose
16. Dave Alonzo
17. David Pearson
18. Dick Kranzler
19. Paul Dorrity
20. Joe Frasson
21. Frank James
22. Dick Bown
23. Randy Dodd
24. Ray Elder
25. Jimmy Insolo
26. Jim Cook
27. Steven Froines
28. Sam Posey
29. Bobby Isaac
30. Jack McCoy
31. G. T. Tallis
32. Les Loeser
33. Dick Brooks
34. Buddy Young
35. James Hylton
36. Elmo Langley
37. Carl Joiner
38. Don Noel
39. Don White
40. Lothar Motschenbacher
41. Frank Dieny
42. Scotty Cain
43. Bob England
43. Frank Warren
PERSONAL NOTE: I could not believe that I was actually pulling for Dan Gurney in this race after all the times I had cursed him (to the best of my young gentleman vocabularly at the time) for always winning. But this time he was driving for Petty.
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