Forum Activity for @tim-leeming

Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
09/07/11 09:38:33PM
3,119 posts

All Quiet but Cars at RIR on Laps 9-11 / No TV, No Radio, No P.A. Announcers


General

I'm happy to see this. Sort of like them stopping the 600 a couple years ago when it was concluded on Memorial Day. For anyone who doesn't know, I'm a very proud American. What happened to us on September 11, 2001 needs to be remembered for what it was and not like Pearl Harbor where 60 years later our government is apologizing to the Japs for ending the war. The Political Correctness bunch needs a gang of we Stock Car Race Fans to show them how to be Americans!
Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
09/07/11 09:21:16PM
3,119 posts

What's That Mean?


Trivia

Dover is the place, I'm sure of that. However, I have to go with D.W. as coming up with that. He's come up with everthing else from co-opetition to vortex to gophers to being the poster child for the biggest mouth engaged by the smallest brain.
Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
09/07/11 09:25:01PM
3,119 posts

Put Up or Shut Up at Rockingham on Tax Day


General

This is really great news and it really well deserved for Andy and all the work he has put in there. I love that track, second only to Darlington, but at least The Rock is operated by someone with the proper perspective in all areas of racing and a true regard for the fan. I will surely be there one way or the other!
Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
09/07/11 09:33:09PM
3,119 posts

Speedway Hotdogs & Goats


General

Dave, my most sincere thanks for posting that video. Not only did I get a great education on the hot dog, but also got to see the number ONE driver on the single digit salute get so pleasantly greated. The very beginning of this forum has the picture of another Busch kid. Wow, how funny is that?

T

Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
09/07/11 09:40:08PM
3,119 posts

High Heels on the NASCAR Plaza


General

I wonder if Danica can drive in high heels and that half unzipped leather suit? Guess we shall see.
Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
09/05/11 09:45:29AM
3,119 posts

READ THIS ONE. MAY BRING BACK MEMORIES


General

Every Labor Day my thoughts run back to 1957 and my first Southern 500 to see. Prior to that race, I would sit on the shady front porch of my uncle Bobby's house and listen to the race on the radio. Uncle Bobby had gotten me involved in stock car racing when I hadn't even quite turned 6. Half mile tracks like Columbia Speedway and quarter mile tracks like Newberry, and a few others thrown in here and there. Uncle Bobby loved racing and still, although he is basically disabled these days, will still watch when he can and he will be the first one to let you know all the things NASCAR is doing that really irk him. In reality, it should be against Federal Law for NASCAR to cause cruel and unjust punishment to an old man who cared so much for the sport.

My uncle Bobby had taken me to the spring convertible race at Darlington in 1957 and even today I can recall the awe that overcame me at that first view of the huge track (remember the date) in the early morning South Carolina mist of spring. Watching the convertibles race on that track at what I then considered to be impossible speeds remains fresh in my mind as if it were yesterday. So, when Uncle Bobby said we were going to the Southern 500 (a little tidbit of information he withheld from me until Sunday afternoon before the race) I couldn't even sleep Sunday night. Very early Monday morning we traveled US 1 to Camden, then Highway 34 over to Darlington (there were no interstate highways then) and we entered the infield as the sun was coming up. Pulling up next the infield fence in turn three I jumped out and ran to the fence to claim my spot. Didn't matter that I could only see the cars for a few brief seconds as they flew by me, I wanted to be as close as possible to the track.

Even though the race started at 11:00 a.m., I think, if memory doesn't fail me completely, it seemed like an eternity until I heard the "most famous words in auto racing" come from across the infield and the throaty engines came to life. I pressed against that fence waiting to see the cars coming down the back straight behind the pace car. Even today I can't tell you if the ground was actually shaking beneath my feet from the cars or if my excitement was making my entire body tingle, but I was ready for that race to get started.

After a couple pace laps, I could hear the engines go to full speed across the infield and pressed even closer to the fence. Here they came! Full speed. Grains of sand swirled into my eyes as the multi-colored blurs flew in front of me. Little did I realize at that time that the Southern 500 would become such a part of my life that for the next forty plus years my Labor Day weekends would be spent at Darlington.

Somewhere around Lap 25 or so, there was a very bad crash right in front of me. That crash took the life of Bobby Myers, although I did not know it at the time. I have always had the ability for some reason to block bad things from my memory. I had actually never had flashbacks of that crash but I did see it on at Southern 500 dvd about ayear ago and the flashback was incredible. When I saw that accident on dvd I actually felt as if I was experiencing the actual event all over again. Even though I was watching the dvd in air conditioning, the heat of the Darlington infield and the wire fence cutting into my fingers were very real to me. The dvd didn't accurately reflect my then refreshed memories of that accident.

Bobby Myers was the first fatality I had actually witnessed in racing and although I successfully blocked that crash from my mind all those years, I have no problem recalling it now. I have no problem recalling all those faces of drivers lost over the years since 1957. Racing is a cruel sport, at times, but the wonderful memories seem to temper the cruelty to an extent.

So, this Labor Day morning, as I look out of my window, I see the South Carolina sun shinging brightly although the forecast is for rain later today from the storm that has drenched Atlanta and moved the race to Tuesday as they are saying now. There is no Jerry Lewis MDA telethon on tv today and the very poor attempt of MDA to present an alternative for six hours last night only helps to enhance the mood of times lost to "progress" or whatever term you wish to apply to the loss of things that once were. Things that once were important to me and to so many others. Time moves on. Things that made us happy growing up are supposed to transposes into things that make us happy now. Wonder why it doesn't always work that way.

Rest in Peace Bobby Myers. I'm sure you are. I'm sure you often wonder what happened to YOUR kind of racing where the drivers were real and the cars were real. Whether or not the safety advancements of today would have saved your life in that crash are to be disputed for that was a violent crash. But that is supposition and for all to wonder. What matters is that you, and so many of your generation, built a sport that became an obssessoin to so many fans like me. Thank you.


updated by @tim-leeming: 12/05/16 04:02:07PM
Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
09/04/11 01:54:33PM
3,119 posts

Welcome Ann Bland Salster


General

Welcome Ann. Great to have you here. I was a big fan of your father. He actually joined that Richard Petty Fan Club of Columbia we started in 1963. He may even have some of our old newsletters around somewhere if everything he owned didn't get discarded. He came to our National Fan Club meeting in the Darlington infield and we really thought we were big time with him there.
Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
09/03/11 09:15:21AM
3,119 posts

PERHAPS THE LEGEND DOESN'T BELONG HERE AFTER ALL


General

Richard, problem with you analysis is that during the watching of Amazon Women, I had very few of the PBR, Even so, a case would not have helped that movie. It started off terrible and got worse. By the time 20 minutes had passed I HAD to keep watching it because I sincerely believed NO movie could be THAT bad and it would surely get better. It never did. Neither did Talladega Nights.

Dave, believe me, there is no possible way to spoil Amazon Women. Watch it anyway. If you decide you like it, I'll buy you a case of PBR and you can watch it again.

Ed, my e-mail address is: legendtim83@yahoo.com I am looking forward to seeing you guys soon. Your event is the highlight of the year. What a great thing you guys do.

Robin, thanks for your support. But, you need to know that somtimes agreeing with The Legend is not in your best interest when it comes to some folks on this site. lol

Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
09/02/11 11:11:44PM
3,119 posts

PERHAPS THE LEGEND DOESN'T BELONG HERE AFTER ALL


General

Let me begin by saying I have tremendously enjoyed my role here at Racers Reunion as "The Legend" as a member, as a writer, radio co-host, and just generally someone who is on this site often. I have made many good friends here in my three years and have met many of those individuals in person. I have no intention of "going quietly into that good night, but I did get the feeling this evening that, perhaps, I don't belong in this group any longer. Please allow me to explain.

Jeff Gilder has told me, supported by Big D and many others, that I should watch the movie "Talladega Nights, the Ballad of Ricky Bobby". I had steadfastly refused to watch the movie because I have no respect for Will Farrell, do not appreciate his attempts at humor, and will go to any lengths to avoid any movie in which he appears. I had seen the "trailers" on TV and even the trailers were a huge turnoff for me.

I was in Wal-Mart a couple weeks ago and lying right on top of the $5.00 bin was the "unrated and uncut" dvd of the movie. That was just after Jeff practically "ordered" me to watch the movie. So, believing that fate was intervening, I paid the $5.00 plus the inflated tax you have to pay in Lexington County, and brought home the movie. I finally had the time to sit down tonight and watch that movie.

Back in the mid-seventies, when HBO was just getting started and I was a young pup living in a mobile home, a group of us would always get together on Friday evenings with a case or two of PBR, and tune in for the 11:00 p.m. HBO movie. This one particiular Friday night the feature was "Amazon Women on The Moon". One of the party boys who always attended was all for any movie that had :"women" in the title so he was primed and right when the movie started at 11:00. Until tonight, "Amazon Women on The Moon" was the worst movie I had ever seen. After "Talladega Nights", I wish I could find a dvd of "Amazon Women" because even that would be preferable to what I just watched.

"Talladega Nights" was the most thoroughly disgusting movie I have ever watched. The fact that NASCAR would even allow it's name to be mentioned in such trash shows me that it's all about "entertainment" or, perceived entertainment, than it is about competition. I will not enumerate all the points I found objectionable, but with the exception of getting to see Benny Parsons again, even though briefly, I regret the time I wasted but I can now say I have seen the movie.

So, if you've seen it and you like it, then Will Farrell has a fan and that is good for Will. If you saw it and didn't like it, then you and I have something in common. Not sure what I'll do with the dvd yet, but I don't think Wal-Mart will take it back once it's been watched. Maybe I'll put it on a string and hang it from the mirror in my truck. I just don't know. It does somewhat concern me, however, that I may not be Racers Reunion material after all.


updated by @tim-leeming: 03/04/19 03:07:37AM
Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
09/02/11 08:23:09AM
3,119 posts

Giving the Start Engines Command Ray Melton Style at Darlington


General

Thanks for the memories! We would always go to Darlington for first day qualifying on Thursdays, back in the day, and the "immediately please' would ring out loud and clear with regularity. He did have the voice to command attention but I remember a very personable man when I finally got to talk with him one day. It is heart-warming to read so many reflective posts on this site and especially when mentioning personnas such as Ray Melton. Thanks.
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