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Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/19/13 01:53:54PM
9,138 posts

Racing History Minute - October 19, 1952


Stock Car Racing History

In a cursory look, I have found a multitude of Ralph Liguori clips in Google News Archives, including from the North Carolina newspapers The Robesonian and Wilmington Star-News when he was living in Fayetteville and racing weekly at Champion Speedway and Raleigh Fairgrounds . Other clips from the Reading Eagle and South East Missourian chronicle Champ Car and Sprint car. Even the Lakeland Ledger covers Ralph winning in Tampa in stock cars. The last story I found was a sad one, in the 2003 St. Petersburg Times regarding Ralph talking the dangers of racing to his grandson upon the death of an IRL racer.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/19/13 01:05:02PM
9,138 posts

Racing History Minute - October 19, 1952


Stock Car Racing History

Title:

Racer Ralph Ligouri - NASCAR

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/19/13 12:48:41PM
9,138 posts

Racing History Minute - October 19, 1952


Stock Car Racing History

Here's an interview and video of "Ralphie the Racer" Liguori racing midgets in 1995 at age 68!!!

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/19/13 12:26:06PM
9,138 posts

Racing History Minute - October 19, 1952


Stock Car Racing History

Term of Endearment : 'Ralphie the Racer' Is a Fixture at a Race He Never Drove

May 11, 1993 |

SHAV GLICK

LOS ANGELES TIMES STAFF WRITER

INDIANAPOLIS When an Indiana sportswriter dubbed Ralph Liguori "Ralphie the Racer" several decades ago, it was hardly a compliment.

Liguori, after all, was the answer to a trivia question: Who tried hardest to get in the Indianapolis 500 and never made it?

From 1959 to 1968 he came to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway from Tampa to make the race. He never made it to the starting line. He crashed three times, once in another race before the Speedway opened, knocking himself out of what was probably the best car he ever drove. Once his engine blew just as he was about to finish his refresher course.

Twice he put cars in the field that were bumped.

Ralphie the Racer never let frustration and failure get him down. He kept on racing, turning the derisive nickname around and making it one of endearment.

Last June, at 65, he became the oldest winner in a U.S. Auto Club-sanctioned race when he won a 50-lap midget main event at the Indianapolis Speedrome--a one-fifth mile asphalt oval--in his sixth decade of major league racing.

It moved him past other 60-and-over winning drivers, such as Hershel McGriff, Jim McElreath and Mel Kenyon.

In honor of his victory, Dick Jordan, USAC's director of communications, presented Liguori a plaque last fall that read:

"Has served as a great ambassador for the United States Auto Club, now competing in the amazing sixth decade of his racing career. Ralph's legion of followers is nationwide, and his drive for excellence has never diminished. We salute his long-standing membership as a USAC participant and hereby recognize his many contributions to the organization. From his spectacular sprint car triumph in a 1957 race at Langhorne, Pa., to his Indianapolis Speedrome midget victory earlier this season, he has established a USAC record for victory lane longevity. Our hats are off to one of USAC's finest elder statesmen."

And it's not over yet.

"As long as I have my reflexes and my eyesight, and I feel good, I'll keep racing," Liguori said recently. "I'll probably run 15 or 16 races this year. At least, as long as they'll have me."

After Liguori retired as an Indy car driver, he continued to return every year simply to be part of the scene. He and his wife, Jane, are in demand at all the social functions surrounding the 500.

"I still love being here, but there have been changes (in racing) that are definitely not all for the good," he said. "I guess I'm still a little resentful that a poor little rich boy can come back here and buy himself a ride in the 500, and a real good race driver, if he doesn't have the money, can't get a ride.

"Can you imagine one of today's drivers coming here, sleeping all month in his car and showering in the Speedway restroom? That wasn't unusual when I started out."

Liguori had been a champion three-meter platform diver at DeWitt Clinton High in New York City with ambitions of making the Olympic team when World War II began and he quit high school to join the Navy. When he returned home, he went to work for his family's business in the Bronx.

"I was a dress designer," he said. "I was frustrated. I didn't want to make a career out of that. I was engaged, and one night during a bad blizzard I was looking in the papers for some place to go and saw a story about a midget auto race at Kings Bridge Armory. It was indoors, and we could get there in the subway, so away we went.

"I decided that night that driving race cars was what I was going to do. I bought a '37 Ford coupe in a junkyard in Freeport, Long Island, for $25. When I won $25 the first time I raced it, I went home and quit the dress-designing business."

NASCAR was emerging as a racing sanctioning body about that time, and along with stock cars, it had a series for midget race cars. Most of the races were in the New York area, and Liguori became a NASCAR regular.

"One night, after I'd won $400 in Islip (N.Y.), I heard about all the racing going on in Florida, so I decided to give it a try. We settled in Fayetteville, North Carolina, and I was running both midgets and the big Grand National (now Winston Cup) stock cars.

"Bill France (NASCAR founder) was an incredible visionary, and even though nearly all his stock car drivers and tracks were in the South, he knew the importance of getting other parts of the country involved. One day, I told him I had decided to go back to New York and run open-wheel cars.

"He said, 'Ralph, you've got to stay here. I need a Yankee down here, and I've got a guy who will pay you $60 a week and all the money you can make racing. I'm going to advertise you as 'the Fayetteville Yankee.'

"Well, he was quite a salesman, too, so I stayed."

Liguori made enough money to buy property in Tampa in 1956, and he and his wife later built the Sunshine Trailer Park. He also worked at Tampa Bay Downs, George Steinbrenner's track.

"It was perfect for us," he said. "I would work there in the winter and go racing in the summer. I started driving all sorts of cars in 1956 and decided to take a crack at the 500. Sprint cars were the way to get to Indy back then, and when I won a 100-miler at Langhorne in September, I thought I was ready, but I didn't get a ride until 1959 in a Maserati."

For 10 years he chased the dream--still unfulfilled. Liguori's Indy record:

1959--He passed his driver's test in the Maserati, the Eldorado Italia Special, the only foreign entry that year. He qualified at a slow speed and was bumped from the field.

1960--He signed to drive one of the Federal Engineering Specials but broke his arm in a spectacular flip at Trenton, N.J., in April.

1961--He was driving the brutish Novi for Andy Granatelli in practice when the engine blew and the car slid in its own oil, slammed into the wall on the backstretch and exploded in flames. Liguori suffered facial burns but returned in time to qualify, only to find that Granatelli had hired another driver.

1962--He practiced in the McKay Special, but it was so slow that he did not try to qualify it.

1963--He qualified the Schulz Fuel Equipment Special at 147.620 m.p.h., but was bumped and named an alternate.

1964--He practiced in the Ollie Prather roadster but made no attempt to qualify.

"I made some bad mistakes," he said. "I felt that the best way to get recognized was to drive anything I could lay my hands on and show what I could do. The trouble was, I usually got in trouble, got myself a bad reputation and never lived it down."

1965--He crashed in the third turn during practice, driving the Demler roadster, and never attempted to qualify.

1966--He practiced in Walt Flynn's rear-engine Ford, but again made no attempt to qualify.

1967--He crashed Flynn's Ford on a warm-up lap for qualification, breaking a bone in his wrist.

1968--Still considered a rookie, he never finished the four-phase test when the engine blew in the Dayton Steel Wheel car on the first lap of his final phase. Observers praised Liguori for the way he handled the car during the spin, keeping it away from the walls. The next day he got into two other cars but could not get either up to the required speed before time ran out.

"I kept coming back after that, but I didn't get on the track," he said. "In fact, I haven't missed a 500 since I first came here in 1959. Indianapolis is sort of a home away from home for Jane and me. We get an apartment and spend the spring here."

Liguori had his proudest moment as a racer in the 1970 Hoosier Hundred, a dirt car race in which he passed A.J. Foyt with two laps to go and finished second behind Al Unser. It was his highest Indy car finish in more than 60 races.

Liguori will drive a dirt car in Foyt's Hulman Hundred, a Silver Crown championship race, on the Friday night before the 500 this year. The race will be on the same Indiana Fairgrounds track where he beat Foyt in 1970.

Looking back on all the frustrations and failures to make the 500, does Ralphie the Racer have any regrets?

"I have only one regret," he answered. "That I can't start over and do the same thing. I owe everything to racing."

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/19/13 12:21:50PM
9,138 posts

Racing History Minute - October 19, 1952


Stock Car Racing History


These wonderful History Minute posts by Tim Leeming and the followup by members like TMC-Chase just open the floodgates to further research.

The name of 10th place finisher RALPH LIGUORI caught my eye. I knew the name, but couldn't place it. The Bronx, New York native, Liguori and I share a birthday. I turned 65 on October 10th and Ralph Liguori, now a Tampa, Florida resident with a racing grandson, Joe Liguori, turned 87!

Liguori was a dress designer in New York! His racing history makes for a fascinating story.

NASCAR's Bill France enticed Liguori to come south to race in his new Grand National series and billed him as "The Fayetteville Yankee" after he and his family settled in Fayetteville, North Carolina.

Liguori made 76 NASCAR Grand National starts and 1 Convertible division start between 1951-1956. His best finish was the third place he posted at the half-mile Wilson County (NC) Speedway dirt oval on May 9, 1954. The following week he drew the pole for the May 16, 1954 Martinsville GN event.

Liguori's dream was to race in the Indianapolis 500 and in 1957 he turned his attention to the USAC Gold Crown Champ cars. Between 1957-1970, he made 61 USAC Champ car starts, posting his best finish of 2nd in 1970 at the Indiana State Fairgrounds.

Ralph Liguori on the famed Williams Grove, Pennsylvania dirt oval in 1957 - uncredited photo

Kathy Seymour captured this shot of Ralph Liguori in later years

Although Liguori lived his dream of racing fast cars, he never qualified for the Indianapolis 500. He made six attempts, earning the nickname of "Ralphie the Racer" for his dedication. Liguori won a feature event at age 70 in midget competition.

Twenty years ago, in 1993, the late Shav Glick of the Los Angeles Times - one of tthe world's great motorsports writers - penned an outstanding piece about Ralph Liguori - "Ralphie the Racer." Here is that piece in the followup reply below:

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/18/13 02:34:55PM
9,138 posts

Racing History Minute - October 18, 1964


Stock Car Racing History

This is NOT from the event in question, but for newcomers who might like to hear what the old radio broadcasts sounded like, here's a link to the tape of my old friend, Sammy Bland anchoring the 1962 National 400 radio broadcast live from Charlottte:

http://www.mrn.com/Media-Center/MRN-Show-Archives/Classic-Races.aspx?id=3f777cc2e32a47e8b5ca8f7e0fd0b9eb

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
08/15/14 03:13:26PM
9,138 posts

Joe Carver Pushed & Promoted Best Female Stock Car Driver I Ever Saw


Stock Car Racing History


Just found this story noting the first time Diane Teel made the show at Martinsville , in the Late Model Sportsman portion of 1981 Dogwood 500 Classic . And, she was already 33 years old!

Here's a Ray Lamm photo of Diane Teel in 1983 NASCAR Busch Series action at Martinsville , long before we ever heard of Miss "you know who."

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/18/13 07:52:22PM
9,138 posts

Joe Carver Pushed & Promoted Best Female Stock Car Driver I Ever Saw


Stock Car Racing History

Just for you, Tim... The Birmingham News interviewed Her Poniness earlier today at Talladega. Here's a couple of quotes that just sparkle:

"I'm right where I need to be, right where I was going to be," she said Friday morning. "I've done everything I can to learn throughout the year and to get ready for next year."

Asked to grade her performance, Patrick said that it's an impossible thing to do in the sport she's in.

"You can't give yourself a grade," she said. "Sometimes you're better than people think you're going to be, sometimes you're worse."

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/17/13 11:04:15PM
9,138 posts

Joe Carver Pushed & Promoted Best Female Stock Car Driver I Ever Saw


Stock Car Racing History


I never realized until I read a 2005 story in the Newport News Daily Press that the late NASCAR promoter, Joe Carver (he of Langley Field, Nashville Fairgrounds & Darrell Waltrip fame) was responsible for pushing and promoting the best female stock car driver I ever saw.

Her name is Diane Teel . She was the first woman to win a NASCAR sanctioned race and the first woman to qualify for a race in the Busch Series. Behind Diane, I rank Shawna Robinson and Patty Moise to complete my trio of top lady stock car racers.

Long retired from racing, the York County, Virginia school bus driver today has a young granddaughter, Macy Causey , racing dirt late models at Billy Sawyer's Virginia Motor Speedway.

Here's Diane's story from the Newport News paper:


A Ride Into Racing History



June 22, 2005 By DAVID TEEL

Seaford, Virginia native and NASCAR pioneer Diane Teel "could flatfoot it with anyone."

The promoter considered her nothing more than a gimmick. Rivals feared her a dangerous intrusion.

And truth be told, Diane Teel wasn't sure all those men were wrong about her.

This was, after all, 1976. Women didn't serve as secretary of state or wear the Silver Star, and they sure didn't make a habit of swapping paint with the good ol' boys of stock car racing.

Oh, there were some novelty acts, and more than a few of those "powder-puff" events, ladies-only affairs that drew more snickers than cheers. But a woman determined to compete week in and week out?

"Oh my God," Teel thought as she fired the engine at Langley Speedway that first night. "What have I gotten myself into?"

A ride into history, that's what.


Indeed, as open-wheel racing celebrates and hypes Danica Patrick, Diane Teel lives quietly in her ancestral home along Seaford's Back Creek, surrounded by memorabilia and content with her place as a NASCAR pioneer.

"I have some records," she says, "that no one can take away."

And to think, it all began with a school-bus rodeo.

PUBLICITY STUNT

Diane was the son Harry and Hilda White never had. She disdained dolls, embraced the outdoors and followed her dad's every step -- onto his commercial fishing boat and into the bleachers at Langley Speedway.

When Donnie Teel came a-courtin' from Williamsburg, the two teens enjoyed races more than movies. Langley was their usual stop, with a few trips to Richmond. And the routine didn't change after they married in 1965.

Donnie worked for Apple Auto Parts in York County and began crewing at Langley for driver Dale Lemonds, a co-worker. Diane was the team's errand girl, trekking across Virginia and North Carolina for spare parts. When the guys washed the race car, Diane, a York County school-bus driver, air-dried it by turning laps around a local peach orchard.

Clearly, she was comfortable behind the wheel, and when she won a county school-bus rodeo (parking maneuvers, obstacle course), Teel strutted around the race team "proud as a peacock."

Little did she know.


Joe Carver was Langley Speedway's promoter, and he wasn't above a little showmanship. Why not, he thought during the 1976 season, have Teel race against the men in a non-descript Street Division race?

"We were always looking for something a little different," Carver says. "We started it off as kind of a fun (publicity) thing, but once she got in the car we learned pretty quickly she was for real. She was a good racer and knew more about how to make a car handle better than some of the men did."

Not that first night.

"With (about) four laps to go, I spun out coming down the back straightaway," Teel recalls, "and they had to call the race in order to clean up the track."

Neither Carver nor Teel was deterred, and they hatched plans for Teel to compete full-time the following year in the Limited Sportsman division.


And what did Donnie tell the fellas who ragged him about crew-chiefing for a woman?

"I can go home and go to bed with my driver. Can you?"

ROOKIE MISTAKES

They met six months before his death, but in that brief time, Raymond "Tiny" Slayton became the Teels' racing muse. He was a renowned car builder based in Baltimore, and he took a shine to the aspiring driver, gender be damned, and her hubby/crew chief.

Late in 1976, Slayton gave Teel a car for her debut season. It was a '66 Chevy, and the title retains front-page prominence in one of Teel's scrapbooks.

Slayton died of a heart attack on Dec. 22, 1976, and in his honor, Teel copied the paint scheme (red-and-white) and number (19) of cars Slayton had run at various tracks.

"My one regret," she says, "is that Tiny never saw me race."

At least in person. Teel insisted then and maintains now that Slayton spoke to her from the grave, offering encouragement, suggesting strategy and forecasting victory.

"I know it sounds silly," she says, "but it's the truth."


Believe her or not, but know this for certain: Teel, 29 at the time, debuted her Limited Sportsman car April 2, 1977, and finished eighth among 20 drivers.

Her best performances that season were a second and two thirds. But far too often, Teel lost control. Don't think her male rivals didn't notice.

"I screwed up bad," she says. "My crew went through hell with me. Three complete bodies we went through that first year."

Her most notorious wreck was with Howard Crews, an imposing, bearded gent with a fiery temper. Carver couldn't promote their clash -- the Fair Lady against the Mountain Man -- enough.

Later that season, Teel says, she and Crews shared the front row of the starting grid. They raced clean, without incident.

"It was a true shot in the arm for us," Carver says of Teel's presence. "But before long, some of the novelty wore off and she was just another competitor."

Any doubts about Teel's intent came the night she collided with Bubba Nissen and landed in Hampton General Hospital, where doctors believed she had a broken back. She'll never race again, Donnie told Diane's sister Betty.

When X-rays proved negative, Teel left the hospital. Among her first questions to Donnie: Can we get a backup car ready for next week?

THE LADY IS A CHAMP

Henry Klich bought the pizza and the beer at Anna's. It was the least the Langley Speedway owner, a man of course, could do on a woman's big night.

This was June 10, 1978, and Teel had just won the 30-lap Limited Sportsman race at Langley. She was the first woman to capture a Langley feature, and most record-keepers thought her the first woman to win any NASCAR-sanctioned event.

"The men drivers work just as hard as I do," Teel said that night, "and their crews work just hard as mine."

Teel returned to Victory Lane once more that season. Perhaps most impressive, she finished among the top 10 in all 19 of her races, among the top five in all but three.

With a fourth-place finish on Sept. 9, Teel authored another first: She clinched the Limited Sportsman points championship.

A woman winning a NASCAR track title? Someone call Gloria Steinem and Richard Petty.


"I just wanted to be a racer," Teel says. "I didn't want to be a feminist or anything like that. Just leave me alone and let me drive like everyone else."

Fine, but could Teel drive faster cars against faster competition? Was she anything more than a local curiosity dominating a mid-major division at some backwater track?

You decide.

During the next four years, Teel became the first woman to win a NASCAR-sanctioned Late Model Sportsman race, the first to qualify for a Busch Series event and the first to record a top-10 finish in Busch.


That was more than enough to convince Orvil Reedy, who spent several afternoons in Teel's rearview mirror at Martinsville Speedway.

"All the ladies I had seen drive were a little skittish going into the corners and coming out the other side," Reedy says. "They weren't real competitive. I thought she was going to be in the way, which was absolutely wrong.

"She had the ability to drive the car down into the corner, and once she got it settled she could get back on the throttle. She could flatfoot it with anyone. If she got in the way, she got banged. If you got in the way, she banged you."




Case in point: Teel's historic Late Model Sportsman victory, July 28, 1979, at Langley.

A rookie in the division, Teel overcame an early spin with Larry Lawrence and passed Eddie Card for second place with 16 of 100 laps remaining. Two laps later, Teel inherited the lead when Billy Smith wrecked. She later avoided Buck Godsey's spinning car at lap 90 and remained in front until the checkered flag.

"Ninety-nine percent of (rivals) treated me just like a driver, especially in (the Busch Series)," Teel says. "I couldn't have asked to be treated any better, especially by Harry Gant, Dale Jarrett and Darrell Waltrip."

Teel never won an official Busch race, but her eighth-place effort in a 250-lapper at Langley in 1982 stood for 13 years as the best Busch finish by a woman. She added a 10th-place finish at Martinsville in 1983, where she beat the likes of Jarrett, Reedy and Phil Parsons and enjoyed her biggest Busch payday -- $1,000.

According to racingreference.com, Teel qualified for 11 Busch races from 1982-86 and earned $5,040.

"It was a thrill," Donnie Teel says of those years. "It cost a lot of money. We spent what we had and got out."

FAMILY TIES

She quit to be a better mom.

Regrets? A few pangs, sure. She was only 38, and a full-time Busch Series ride seemed within reach. But the circuit was going national back then, and Diane didn't want to leave her two children, Donnie Lee and DeAnna.

The years, not to mention four grandchildren, erased any misgivings. Just stroll around the Teels' home, the same one in which Diane was raised. The motif is equal parts family and racing, even if a few mementos washed away in 2003 when Hurricane Isabel deposited 18 inches of water inside the house.

There's a large photograph of Donnie Lee and DeAnna racing go-karts in Rockingham, N.C. There on the mantel are helmets Diane and Donnie Lee wore.

Donnie Lee and his two children live here; DeAnna, her husband and their two children live nearby and soon will build next door.

Diane is 57 now and still drives for a living.

"Thirty-two years," she says of her time in a school bus, "a lot longer than I raced."

Much as she covets her place in NASCAR's annals, Teel is surprised more women haven't followed.

The Nextel Cup, stock car's premier circuit, has yet to see a viable female, while open-wheel racing is abuzz at Patrick's fourth-place finish at the Indianapolis 500 last month and her upcoming Indy Racing League appearance Saturday at Richmond International Raceway.



Even at the regional level, women are rare. Since Teel's championship in 1978, only one woman has won a points title at Langley: Tonya Miller in Mini-Stock in 1992 and '93.

"I wish someone really would break through and do something," Teel says. "I always thought it would be my daughter because she was hell on wheels. It just didn't turn out that way."






No, Donnie Lee is the racing rat these days, crewing for Legends teams at Lowe's Motor Speedway near Charlotte, N.C. Moreover, he brought closure to his mom's NASCAR career.

Diane, you see, always yearned to race at her sport's Mecca: Daytona International Speedway. She never made it, but Donnie Lee did, in a go-kart,

"I've seen my dream come true with my child," Diane says, "and I'm fine with that."

Indeed, racing has been good to Diane Teel. Why, she and Donnie even found friendship with some of the drivers who years ago weren't sure a woman belonged in a race car.

Among them is Orvil Reedy from out Daleville way. He still frequents the races at Motor Mile Speedway in Radford, where he's seen a couple of women behind the wheel.

"They do OK," he says, "but they still don't have what Diane had." *

THE TEEL FILE

DIANE TEEL

Age: 57. (2005)

Hometown: Native and resident of Seaford, Virginia

Occupation: York County school-bus driver for 32 years.

Vocation: Stock-car racer from 1977-86.

Family: Husband, Donnie. Children DeAnna and Donnie Lee. Four grandchildren.

Photos from Macy Causey Racing web site



updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/17/13 09:55:39PM
9,138 posts

GO WEST YOUNG MAN


Current NASCAR

Wish him much success in his new venture.

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