The Way We Were - Bristol 1965 - Sleeping in a Plymouth Belvedere

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
11 years ago
9,137 posts

I especially wanted our Legend, Tim Leeming - world's foremost Plymouth fan - to see Monte Dutton's excellent blog about his first Bristol race in 1965. You'll see why.

Bristol and I Go Back a Ways

This is the majestic view I won't have this weekend.

This is the majestic view I wont have this weekend.

The first time I laid eyes on Bristol Motor Speedway, it was Bristol International Raceway and it didnt seem overly international. It looked like a small-college football stadium, though much larger because a half-mile ribbon of asphalt is twice as large as the quarter-mile track that rings the football field at Bowman Gray Stadium in Winston-Salem. Asphalt coated the track, and the turns were moderately, not high, banked.

I was nonetheless overwhelmed because I was, (a.) seven years old, and, (b.) a bit fatigued, having slept sitting up in a 1964 Plymouth Belvedere along with Ralph, Steve and Marshall Barnes, none of whom survives, so I reckon I cant prove it.

Ned Jarrett won the Volunteer 500 in the autumn of 1965, and it was the first paved stock-car race I ever saw. I had already watched a bunch of flathead Fords circle a dusty quarter mile in Greenwood, S.C. Ralph was the sole full-time employee of my grandfathers curb market, and he took me to see Richard Petty, who was the only driver who counted and the reason we slept in a Plymouth. When it became obvious The King, not yet acknowledged as such, wasnt going to win, we walked back down the incline and listened to Gentleman Ned win on the radio. At the time, Petty was merely Rapid Richard of Randleman.

The second time I laid eyes on Bristol, I didnt get to see the inside because the family was participating in a nearby horse show.

If I had gone to bed in 1965 and awakened at the track this morning, I couldnt possibly know it was the same place. Its vastly different than when I wrote about my first Bristol race 20 years ago. Back then the press box was in turn one, whereas now it majestically overlooks turns three and four. I parked at the foot of a long asphalt incline, and making my way up to the press box was a bit like walking up an Olympic ski-jump ramp. Once up there, there were steps up to the press box proper. I remember when an elevator was first installed. When Bob Latford, also sadly departed now, touted the ease of movement afforded by the elevator, I told him the steps were nothing compared to the walk it required to reach them.

Well, Latford conceded, thats the truth.

What did resemble a small football stadium now appears as if an alien mothership landed in the shadow of Holston Mountain, particularly at night when it is illuminated by an eerie glow.

Some race tracks are drudgery to cover. Bristol is fun. Part of that is due to the quality of the racing. Part is due to the friendliness of the folks who work there. The late Jeff Byrd is the only track president who ever came out into the press parking lot, no longer at the foot of a would-be ski jump, to drink beer and listen to me sing Jerry Jeff Walker songs.

Theres a recurring theme. I keep writing about folks who arent around anymore. This weekend I wont be there, but Ill be fine, thank you, watching from the distance and with a spirit that imagines itself on the grounds.

Posted in NASCAR | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments



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"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"

updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
11 years ago
4,073 posts
To his credit, Monte is the only media member to join our folks in the parking lot to drink a beer and play Jerry Jeff Walker songs.


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Schaefer: It's not just for racing anymore.
Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
11 years ago
3,119 posts

Thanks, Dave. I really enjoyed reading that. To think Monte and I were at the same race apparently. I was at Bristol in 1964 and HAD to go in August (I think it was) in 1965 because the Mopars were allowed to return to competition. It is nothing like it was then. In fact, thinking back, I actually went the first time in 1962 and it seems it was nothing. But the drive through the mountains to get there was pretty! I appreciate you watching out for me Dave.




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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.

Leon Phillips
@leon-phillips
11 years ago
626 posts

Great Story

Jeff Gilder
@jeff-gilder
11 years ago
1,783 posts

Love this 1983 shot sent to me from Kevin Morgan




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Founder/Creator - RacersReunion®
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
11 years ago
9,137 posts

I love the 1983 Bristol photo Jeff posted. That's the old asphalt Bristol I so loved. I didn't make it to Bristol for the first time until the Spring 1967 Southeastern 500 - but, it was still in its original "low banked" asphalt configuration then. I remember how shiny and white and new the concrete grandstands still looked after several years. You can see them in the old torn photo below I took from the infield of G.C. Spencer's #49 Plymouth after the race.

This morning, a local Charlotte television sports reporter showed a clip of Bill Elliott getting his first career short track win. It was at Bristol in the Spring 1988 Valleydale 500. That win was a springboard for a championship season by the Awesome One driving that familiar #9 Coors/Melling Thuinderbird.

The sportscaster, who used to be based in Atlanta, made two interesting observations while the tape rolled. He marvelled that you could actually tell the brand of car being driven and he commented that Bill was the only athlete he ever interviewed who turned "yes" into a three syllable word!

The 1-minute clip below of Bill Elliott's 1988 championship season highlights begins with Elliott's Bristol spin by Geoff Bodine and subsequent comeback victory.




--
"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"