Forum Activity for @tmc-chase

TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
09/16/13 12:53:10PM
4,073 posts

September 16, 1979: Richard wins CRC Chemicals 500


Stock Car Racing History


As Tim Leeming noted in his Racing Historical Minute today, few GN/Cup races have been held on September 16th. The first one wasn't run until 1973. And the second didn't occur until 1979. I blogged about the 1979 event a couple of years ago as part of my Richard Petty 200 Wins series. I can't recall if I posted the link here at the time or not. Either way, I thought I'd add it today since it is the anniversary of the race.

My original blog post is here:

https://bench-racing.blogspot.com/2011/09/september-16-this-day-in-petty-history.html

I'll copy, paste and tweak here.

September 16, 1979 - Richard Petty wins his 189th career race by nipping Donnie Allison in the CRC Chemicals 500 at Dover. In doing so, he closes the points gap on Darrell Waltrip as he pursues his seventh Grand National / Winston Cup championship.


RacersReunion member and friend, Brian '200WINZ' Hauck, is a veteran of many Dover races going all the way back to the first one in 1969. He and a bunch of friends attended the 1979 race and shared a few photos from the day with me.

Two NASCAR Hall of Famers - The King and the Silver Fox - pace the field for the start:



Petty gets under a scruffy-haired rookie driver who had won the pole for the race:




From the late 70s through early 80s, Darrell Waltrip garnered about as many boo's as Kyle Busch does today. Brian said the crowd cheered lustily when the 88 Gatorade Chevy driven by Boogity 3x was hauled to the garage after slapping the wall. (Again, remember he was the points leader at the time.)

The 43 STP Monte Carlo making a pit stop. Note the circular piece of sheet metal near the STP emblem on the right rear quarter-panel. The piece was riveted to the panel to cover a right-side fuel filler - the standard location for it for the Riverside road-course race.

Dale Inman clarified the Dover car was the primary Riverside car in 1979. With limited sponsorship funding in that era and Riverside as the only road-course race, teams generally did not build a separate car just for a left-and-right circuit. Yet, it seems strange to think of a chassis set-up for Riverside having anything in common with what was needed for Dover. As an aside, Inman claims the first road course car he built was for the JD Stacy team with driver Tim Richmond in 1982. And guess who swept the '82 Riverside events. Yep, Tim Richmond with Inman as his crew chief. But I digress...


Thanks to RacersReunion.com's Chris Hussey for helping me get this info from Dale.

In an e-mail conversation I had with Steve Hmiel, former Director of Competition for Earnhardt Ganassi Racing and employee of Petty Enterprises from the late 70s through the early 80s, he provided a bit more detail on what Inman said. A year here or there may be different, but the insight as to the building of the cars in that era is interesting - at least to me it is.

We never had a lot of cars. We built a new car every fall, and it went to Daytona. The previous year's car was then used as the short track car, and we sold the oldest one. In fact, the car that was wrecked at Daytona with Pearson was repaired and ran at Rockingham 2 weeks later. When we switched to GM, we built an Olds for the superspeedways and had 2 Monte Carlos for everywhere else. I left in 1982, and we never had a road-race specific car. We just used one of the short track cars. In 1983, the JD Stacy bunch built a really nice road race only car for Joe Ruttman, and by 1984 most of the rest of the teams had one too. The main differences were we took the left turn offset out of the suspension and moved oil tank, ignition boxes, battery, etc. to the right side. You can't do that with the current rules.

The scruffy-haired youngster - Dale Earnhardt - went on to earn Rookie of the Year honors in 1979 and ended up with a pretty good career when all was said and done.

Petty makes a hard left turn to head for victory lane:

And the crowd goes crazy - at least the Petty faithful does. (Hauck is in the center of the photo with the exuberant fist pump.)

I'm pretty sure I clipped this picture from the next year's ticket brochure. The track put me on their mailing list way back in the day. The brochures often gave me small - but useful - pictures such as this one.

Cover of race program I nabbed from an ebay listing.


Article courtesy of Jerry Bushmire

TMC


updated by @tmc-chase: 09/16/20 09:28:00AM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
09/16/13 12:14:47PM
4,073 posts

Racing History Minute - September 16, 1973


Stock Car Racing History


From Spartanburg Herald

On the same day David won in Dover, his son Larry got a start in his own racing career at Harris Speedway.


updated by @tmc-chase: 09/15/17 01:12:13PM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
09/15/13 10:29:10AM
4,073 posts

A SPECIAL ANOUNCEMENT WILL BE MADE IN THE DRIVERS MEETING TODAY


Current NASCAR

Rats. Thought announcement might be to add Danica and Denny to the Chase. Unfair to leave both of them out in their tough seasons ya know.
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
09/14/14 12:47:04AM
4,073 posts

Racing History Minute for September 14, 1964; Cotton Teaches David a Lesson at Richmond


Stock Car Racing History

Mark Aumann wrote a column for NASCAR about this race back in 2011. I found it on archive.org's Way Back Machine.

http://web.archive.org/web/20110511224137/http://www.nascar.com/news/110429/retro-racing-maumann-dpearson-cowens-richmond/index.html

Also, the Spartanburg Herald ran only a token AP wire service about the race. I would have thought they would have featured more about it - and certainly over the next few days with follow-up coverage. But they didn't.

TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
09/14/15 10:25:04AM
4,073 posts

September 14, 1958: Welborn Stakes Claim in Salisbury


Stock Car Racing History


Turned my RR post into a blog post with a little bit more info. Enjoy.

https://bench-racing.blogspot.com/2015/09/september-14-1958-welborn-stakes.html


updated by @tmc-chase: 09/14/20 08:33:20AM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
09/14/13 11:41:48PM
4,073 posts

September 14, 1958: Welborn Stakes Claim in Salisbury


Stock Car Racing History

NASCAR scheduled races for two of its major series on September 14, 1958. The Grand National drivers were at Atlantic Rural Fairgrounds for the Richmond 200. Speedy Thompson won the race, and Lee Petty was second.

About 250 miles southwest of Richmond, Salisbury Super Speedway hosted its first major NASCAR event - a convertible series race. The track hosted one other major race - a Grand National event - on October 5, 1958. I'll blog about that race in a few weeks so you likely have a pretty good idea the winner of that race. :-)

The convertible race had an odd race distance - 155 laps, 96.9 miles. Twenty-six cars started the race with Larry Frank on the pole. The Petty teams were quite busy that day. Papa Lee was racing in Richmond, and he had two more cars in the convertible race. His brother, Julian, fielded three cars at Salisbury.

Julian's 3 cars were driven by the race winner, Bob Welborn as well as Tiny Lund and Ken Rush.

Petty Engineering's two Oldsmobiles were driven by Richard in car #2 and Fireball Roberts in Lee's traditional #42. From what I can tell, the race was the one and only time Roberts raced in a car fielded by the Pettys.

Most of the Petty cars qualified well. Lund started on the front row alongside pole winner Frank. Fireball qualified the #42 third. Eventual race winner qualified 6th, and Julian's 3rd driver Ken Rush started 7th. Richard had to start from way back in 17th - but his night did improve as he eventually finished 5th in the race.

I haven't been able to find a race report for a September 15th paper. But I did find a preview of the event in the Spartanburg Herald. Perhaps Tim Leeming or others can flip through Greg Fielden's Rumblin' Ragtops book to see if much was written about the race.

Source: Spartanburg Herald

Fin Driver Car
1 Bob Welborn '57 Chevrolet
2 Larry Frank '57 Chevrolet
3 Bill Morton '57 Ford
4 Bob Walden '57 Ford
5 Richard Petty '57 Oldsmobile
6 Jimmy Massey '57 Ford
7 Roy Tyner '57 Plymouth
8 Shep Langdon '56 Ford
9 Bill Poor '56 Chevrolet
10 Tiny Lund '58 Chevrolet
11 Harvey Hege '57 Ford
12 Fred Harb '57 Mercury
13 George Dunn '57 Mercury
14 Bill Walters '56 Ford
15 Doug Yates '57 Chevrolet
16 Doug Cox '57 Ford
17 Johnny Gardner '56 Ford
18 Jimmy Thompson '57 Chevrolet
19 Fireball Roberts '57 Oldsmobile
20 Ken Rush '57 Chevrolet
21 Neil Castles '56 Ford
22 Whitey Norman '57 Chevrolet
23 Don Angel '56 Ford
24 Marvin Panch '58 Ford
25 Clarence DeZalia '56 Ford
26 Barney Shore '57 Chevrolet

updated by @tmc-chase: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
09/14/13 11:38:15AM
4,073 posts

September 14, 1952: Lee Petty Lassos Langhorne


Stock Car Racing History


Starting deep in the field, Lee Petty wins at the famed but treacherous one-mile, dirt Langhorne Speedway in Pennsylvania. Herb Thomas started from the pole for the 250 lap race, but he never led a lap. He crashed, completed 61 laps, and finished 37th in the large, 44-car field.

Sadly, the race is also notable for another reason. Larry Mann crashed his Hudson during the race and passed away later that evening. His death was the first fatality in NASCAR's GN series.

Read on for more:

https://bench-racing.blogspot.com/2013/09/september-14-1952-lee-petty-lassos.html

Fin Driver Car
1 Lee Petty '51 Plymouth
2 Bill Blair '52 Oldsmobile
3 Herschel Buchanan '52 Nash
4 Tim Flock '52 Hudson
5 Dick Rathman '52 Hudson
6 Slick Smith '52 Oldsmobile
7 Neil Cole '50 Plymouth
8 Ray Duhigg '51 Plymouth
9 Jack Reynolds '50 Dodge
10 Elton Hildreth '50 Nash
11 Iggy Katona '51 Plymouth
12 Joe Eubanks '52 Hudson
13 Erwin Blatt '51 Mercury
14 Ralph Liguori '52 Hudson
15 Bud Farrell '51 Plymouth
16 Bill Barker '51 Oldsmobile
17 Walt Regan '51 Hudson
18 Bill Deakin '51 Plymouth
19 Pappy Hough '51 Plymouth
20 George Gallup '50 Oldsmobile
21 Jack Fisher '52 Oldsmobile
22 Larry Mann '51 Hudson
23 Eddie Van Horn '50 Ford
24 Wimpy Ervin '52 Kaiser
25 Ted Chamberlain '50 Plymouth
26 Fonty Flock '52 Oldsmobile
27 Lucky Sawyer '50 Ford
28 Red Tomlinson '51 Plymouth
29 Ray Erickson '52 Hudson
30 Tony Bonadies '52 Oldsmobile
31 Gene Darragh '52 Hudson
32 Bucky Sager '51 Hudson
33 Felix Wilkes '51 Hudson
34 George Bush '51 Oldsmobile
35 Nelson Applegate '51 Hudson
36 Chuck Garrett '51 Oldsmobile
37 Herb Thomas '52 Hudson
38 Fred Dove '52 Packard
39 Donald Thomas '51 Plymouth
40 Charles Weidler '50 Hudson
41 Lawrence Jacquelin '51 Studebaker
42 Mike Magill '52 Hudson
43 Jimmie Lewallen '52 Oldsmobile
44 Buck Baker

'51 Ford


updated by @tmc-chase: 09/14/20 08:34:38AM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
09/13/13 09:22:34PM
4,073 posts

Jeff Gordon... In


Current NASCAR

This whole situation is farcical. They've attempted to herd cats, nail Jell-O to a tree and put toothpaste back into the tube.

I'm sure as most often happens that the cream will rise to the top as the next 10 races proceed. But in a twisted way, I hope the Cup goes to the wire at Homestead with lame ducks Newman, Harvick, Kurt battling it out with the last minute added 24 being right there as the spoiler in the event the other 3 fall by the wayside.

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