Dave,
In the spring of 1971, at NASCAR's urging, Columbia, Savannah, Myrtle Beach, (possibly
Greenville-Pickens too) and Cumberland Int'l Speedway in Fayetteville, NC were all paved....creating a little Carolina late model circuit. Life-long dirt racers had the chance to try their skills on pavement...including my dad who was chomping at the bits to give asphalt a try. When we drug our home-made dirt tack racer to Cumberland.......the hot dog was OMG RAY HENDRICK driving the Tant/Mitchell chevelle !!!.........can you say "knife at a gun fight..."? Well, I could, and I knew we were totally out of our league andwith ZERO chance of even making the race. Ahhhhhh, I was right. We WATCHED the race from the back of our old '66 chevy p/u.
But also in the hot-dog category at ol' Cumberland International, was the impressive looking two car team of Sam Ard and George Fox....#00 and 0 respectively. That was not my first exposure to Sam Ard, nope, I knew how lethal he was, but I really did not know George Fox. Their rigs, neatly painted and lettered were obviously well funded by a company named "Thomas Bros. Country Ham"....Asheboro, NC. It was my introduction to the Thomas Bros. but would not be the last. George Fox seemed to be the lead driver, but Sam Ard (I don't run second to nobody) was the dominant one on the track.
Years, later, 2004 to be exact, I conducted an impromptu interview with Sam Ard, in the pits at the Myrtle Beach Speedway...his career already enshrined in halls of fame, was lending a hand to his son Robert's fledgling racing effort. I asked Sam, in detail to explain how he came to drive for the Thomas Bros.
Sam: "by out-running the sh*t out of every thing they had at Sanford...." ("Sanford" [NC] was a long-since dirt track, and Sam had put a whupping on the George Fox/TBHC team.
Me: "How was George Fox to work with?"
Sam "He complained to Mr. Thomas that since I was working on both cars, that I was making mine faster that his..........so one week, I fixed the seat in his so I could slide it back. When we got to the race that next weekend, George started whining about how slow his car was. So, we traded cars, and I still out run his a*s...."
That 1971 season did not progress too far, before the TBCH team had one driver and it was Sam Ard.