Forum Activity for @dave-fulton

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
01/12/14 09:37:06AM
9,138 posts

Racing History Minute -1972 Winston Western 500


Stock Car Racing History


That fog / smog at Riverside was legendary. Some days you could see the mountains, some days you couldn't. I guess the pilots at the nearby air base mostly made instrument landings, not visual.

I was like you about the red added to the #43. Didn't care for it in the beginning. But, wasn't it amazing how soon the grandstands were filled with a sea of ball caps with alternating panels colored Petty Blue and Da-Glo red? If more recent fans think they saw a lot of black hats with #3, they should have been at the track in the 70s to see a grandstand filled with blue & red caps.

The photo below of me and my wife was taken at Riverside in 1981. You can see the hazy smog rather than blue sky in the background:

And, here's a picture of the blue & red cap given to me at Daytona one February by Ralph Salvino of STP that I wore this past Tuesday & Wednesday when I was walking the dog:

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
01/12/14 09:29:49AM
9,138 posts

ANYBODY GET THE NUMBER OFF THAT CAR THAT WAS FASTEST IN PRACTICE ON FRIDAY


Stock Car Racing History

I've talked before about the painting that used to hang over the bar at the Rocking Ranch just outside of Daytona - hung up in 1981 - of Ralph Earnhardt looking down out of the clouds at Dale Earnhardt, Sr. driving our blue & yellow car at Daytona. Your words made me think of it today.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
01/10/16 12:59:45PM
9,138 posts

Racing History Minute - 1971 Motor Trend 500 - Riverside Raceway


Stock Car Racing History

That was Hershel McGriff's son, Doug posting the 38th place finish in the Permatex go. Doug would later co-drive with his father at LeMans in 1976.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
01/11/14 03:27:18PM
9,138 posts

Racing History Minute - 1971 Motor Trend 500 - Riverside Raceway


Stock Car Racing History

The favorite Riverside, Ca. restaurant of most stock car teams when I was going to Riverside - the Cask 'n Cleaver Steakhouse:

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
01/11/14 03:01:00PM
9,138 posts

Racing History Minute - 1971 Motor Trend 500 - Riverside Raceway


Stock Car Racing History

NASCAR issued the news release below when Ray Elder passed in 2011:

DAYTONA BEACH, Florida Raymond (Ray) Elder, who won a record six championships in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West, died Thursday at the age of 69.

Elder who won titles in 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1974 and 1975 also distinguished himself and his West Coast-based family racing team by winning two NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races at Riverside (Calif.) International Raceway in 1971 and 1972.

Ray was a tough competitor and a great representative of NASCAR on the West Coast, said George Silbermann, NASCAR vice president, regional and touring series. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family.

Elders team with his father, Fred, the car owner and brother, Richard, the crew chief were well known as the Racing Farmers from Caruthers, Calif. Following their retirement from racing, they continued their farming operation. In addition, Elder and his wife, Pat, ran a mini-mart in Caruthers, located about 15 miles from Fresno.

Elder is second on the list of career wins in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West with 47 and also second on the list of career series poles, also with 47. His first series win came at Ascot Park in Gardena, Calif., in 1966 and his last victory was at Craig Road Speedway in Las Vegas in 1978.

In addition to his six championships, Elder finished as the runner-up in the final standings three straight years 1966, 1967, 1968. He holds various records in the modern era of the series, including the most consecutive starts, with 121, and the most top 10 finishes in a season, with 27.

Elder received the Most Popular Driver Award in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West eight times, seven in consecutive years. He was among the drivers named to the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West All-Time Top-10, compiled by NASCAR and NASCAR Insider in 2005. He was among the inaugural inductees into the West Coast Stock Car Hall of Fame in 2002 and was inducted into the Fresno Athletic Hall of Fame in 1990.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
01/10/14 05:29:42PM
9,138 posts

THE ORIGINAL 18 ARE BEING REPLACED --YUP THEY GONE


Stock Car Racing History

I'll second your list, Dennis. Much better than the one shared by Johnny. Those folks down the road from me at the NHOF don't have a frigging clue.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
01/11/14 02:44:44PM
9,138 posts

Racing History Minute - 1970 Motor Trend 500 - Riverside Raceway


Stock Car Racing History

From the November 1, 1966 issue of Illustrated Speedway News :

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
01/11/14 02:24:33PM
9,138 posts

Racing History Minute - 1970 Motor Trend 500 - Riverside Raceway


Stock Car Racing History

A couple of photos of the late Frank Deiny of Speedway Engineering at California's Saugus Speedway in 1970 and 1971as posted at Everett.com

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
01/11/14 01:57:25PM
9,138 posts

Racing History Minute - 1970 Motor Trend 500 - Riverside Raceway


Stock Car Racing History

The article below about Frank Deiny, Jr. and his father, Frank Deiny is from the July 6, 1990 Los Angeles Times :

The Teen Who Would Be King : Frank Deiny Jr. of Burbank Aspires to Race With Likes of Richard Petty on Winston Circuit

July 06, 1990
BRIAN MURPHY
TIMES STAFF WRITER

Up stepped Richard Petty, the King of them all.

"Richard, do you remember Frank Deiny?" the man said by way of introduction.

"Frank Deiny? Why, sure I do," Petty said.

"Well, this is Frank Jr.," he said.

"Frank, How are you?" Petty said with renewed enthusiasm.

The blond 17-year-old, slightly built at 5-foot-10 and 135 pounds, extended his hand. Frank Deiny Jr. eyed Petty with admiration but not awe. After all, one day this man could be his competitor.

So it went last month at Sears Point Raceway where Frank Deiny Jr. of Burbank and his manager, Larry Smith, made the rounds at the Banquet Frozen Foods 300 in Sonoma. Davey Allison, Dale Earnhardt, all the stars of the Winston Cup Series were introduced to Deiny. And, in turn, each brightened at the mention of Deiny's late, great father.

Frank Deiny Sr. died of cancer in 1986 at age 50, leaving Frank Jr., a younger daughter, Diana, and wife Claudia. But while he lived, he cut a substantive figure in the racing community. First as a racer, when he was a champion at Saugus Speedway in 1966 and set a track record in 1965 by becoming the first man to win four consecutive main events. Then, after his racing career, as an engineer.

Deiny could build cars with the best of them. He started making parts for his own cars, then became in demand by other drivers. He started a small business. The business grew.

Deiny built cars for Petty, and other notables in the racing community--from the ground up--and eventually moved to the spacious warehouse at Speedway Engineering in Sylmar.

But the competitive blood never left him, and in his bright-eyed boy he saw an opportunity to carry on the Deiny name in the racing arena.

Frank Jr. never doubted that he wanted to race cars. When he was 3 1/2, he drove his first Midget car.

Being a Deiny, Frank Jr. naturally aims high. In fact, his most common catch phrase--"If I'm going to do it, I'm going to do it right"--speaks volumes for this young man who is mature beyond his years.

Petty? Allison? Earnhardt? Sure, they are legends. But one day soon, Frank Deiny Jr. plans to be right next to them, burning rubber and flying for that checkered flag.

"It was (impressive meeting them)," he said. "But I'm trying to be a businessman. I can't be in awe of another guy, because then he has something over you for when you get there. Because I will be racing against those guys I met."

Currently, Deiny is between his junior and senior years at Burbank High. He races in the USAC Western States three-quarter Midget circuit for crew chief and mentor Larry Hart, a friend of his father's. Deiny, who finished second last year in the competition for rookie of the year, is 10th in the points standings.

But Deiny is at a more defined stage. He is in the first step of the three-step grand plan designed by his father. The elder Deiny, fearing for his son's safety, wanted him to give up driving before an accident occurred. But Deiny's mother knowing how much racing meant to her son, pleaded the boy's case.

Frank Sr. relented, and, following the family creed--"If he's going to do it, he's going do it right"--plotted a course for young Frank.

Step one: To race three-quarter Midgets.

Step two: In two summers, to race back east in the Busch Grand National Circuit.

Step three: To race in the prestigious Winston Cup Series.

If all goes well--meaning Frank Jr. drives well enough to attract a major sponsor--he will reach step three by age 22. Which leaves plenty of years for big-time racing.

To facilitate the plan, Frank Jr. plans to attend college in North Carolina, in the southeastern United States, the hotbed of racing.

"I'm going to major in business management," he said. "So when I retire from racing, I can come back and run (Speedway Engineering)."

And to think, the average teen-ager's most pressing matter is getting a date on Friday night. But Frank Jr. is no ordinary teen-ager. He carried a 4.0 grade-point average at Burbank--until he received a B in chemistry last semester--and is MVP of the school golf team. Deiny is a young man who decided at an early age that if he was going to live life, he was, well, he was going to do it right.

"My mom's the real stickler," he said, grinning sheepishly. "She wants me to get straight A's. She thinks I'm Superman or something. I come home from a race and she says, 'You done with your homework yet?' "

School is a priority. But racing, in Frank Jr.'s own words, "comes first." Literally. Before Frank Jr. ever crossed a school's doorstep, he had experienced the feel of a wheel in his innocent young grip.

After a trip to an old quarter-Midget track in Northridge in 1976, the elder Deiny noticed his son's enthusiasm--present at even that early age.

"Would you like to drive these?" he asked.

"Yeah, yeah, that'd be really neat," Frank Jr. recalls saying.

Father put son in a Midget car, where the youngster sat happily behind a wheel.

"Do you really want one of these?" he asked.

"Yeah, yeah."

The next night, Frank Deiny Jr.--at age 3 1/2--was the proud owner of a real quarter-Midget car. From there, his racing career sped off. At age 5, he consistently broke the Junior Novice qualifying record. He won the Quarter-Midget Grand National Championship Junior Stock title in 1980, the Light Modified National Championship in '81 and the Light B Class title in '83.

In addition, he was the only driver to win the state Monza Championship five years in a row. All told, through 1988, Deiny was eight-time consecutive national quarter-Midget champion and eight-time state champion.

He began racing three-quarter Midgets last year and by his fourth race--his first at Saugus Speedway--had won a main event.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
01/11/14 01:39:02PM
9,138 posts

Racing History Minute - 1970 Motor Trend 500 - Riverside Raceway


Stock Car Racing History

I just noticed that the late Frank Deiny of Los Angeles finished 41st in this Riverside race. In his career, Deiny, who passed in 1986, made only 3 Cup starts - all at Riverside. This was his last.

Deiny's name stands out to me because in the winter of 1993, a young 20 year old kid came calling at our Public Relations office at Richmond International Raceway. The very well spoken and nice looking young man's name was Frank Deiny, JUNIOR. He explained that he had just driven from California to Richmond and was setting up a base in Mechanicsville, Va. just down the road from Richmond International Raceway.

NASCAR officials in Daytona had told Deiny that the toughest NASCAR Late Model Stock Car Racing in the country was in Richmond at Southside Speedway and other Virginia tracks including South Boston, Southampton, Langley Field and Old Dominion. So that's where the young man wanted to set up shop. Frank came by to seek our advice on making contacts and seeking sponsorship to race NASCAR Late Model Stock Cars.

He would eventually take a job working at the renowned Rick Townsend Race Car Products (where the late Dale Earnhardt had cars built for his children, Dale, Jr. & Kelley)and go on to have an outstanding career in NASCAR Late Model Stock Cars, winning track championships at numerous Virginia and Carolinas tracks. He is a multi-time winner of 300 lap races at Martinsville Speedway and the winningest driver to ever compete in the MYRTLE BEACH 400, having won 4 times - in 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2010.

Denny Hamlin made sure Frank had a ride last April at R.I.R. for the Denny Hamlin Short Track Shootout. You realize what a small world racing can be when you see a result like the 1970 Riverside race and realize that a competitor's son from the other coast is a fellow you knew and whose career is now in its twilight.

After stepping out of the car for awhile, Frank got back in at Myrtle Beach in 2010 and went on to win the race. Here's an interview with him just after he qualified for the 2010 Myrtle Beach 400, which he won:

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