Forum Activity for @tmc-chase

TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
08/13/13 05:13:52PM
4,073 posts

August 13, 1961: Asheville-Weaverville's Riot and Rumbling


Stock Car Racing History


August 13, 1961 - Some of the craziest post-race actions look place en masse during and after the Western Carolina 500 at Asheville-Weaverville Speedway. The race saw all sorts of accidents, fires and chunking of the track's asphalt. When the track started coming apart badly, the race was called at about the half-way mark. Junior Johnson led all 258 laps run and was declared the winner of the race - though the ending of the race didn't set well with about 40% of the crowd.

Jim Paschal won the pole in Julian Petty's #44 Pontiac with Junior's Holly Farms Pontiac alongside him. Row 2 was made up of Fred Harb and Jack Smith. Joe Weatherly and Buck Baker qualified 5th and 6th. Emanuel Zervakis and a yet-to-be-King Richard Petty comprised the 4th row. Ned Jarrett and Banjo Matthews rounded out the top 10. Richard was the sole representative for the Petty team as it was still trying to stay on solid footing after Lee Petty's February 1961 accident and months-long recovery. Interestingly, Paschal raced a Petty Enterprises Plymouth in the prior March 1961 A-W race.

Source: Spartanburg Herald

By newspaper accounts, 4,000 folks mobbed the track demanding a refund of their ticket money. FORTY PERCENT of the attendance. I'm not doubting the riot - I'm not doubting the unruliness and mob rule - I'm not doubting the powder keg situation. But 4,000 folks? Who took the head count? Perhaps the 10,000 in attendance was a solid number and reporters just SWAG'd the mob as slightly less than half of those there. I'd love to hear from folks here who were there that day - and who maybe who will confess to taking place in the riot! I'm sure the statute of limitations has run its course after 50+ years. haha

Source: The Robesonian

A different report from the Spartanburg paper . (Click to enlarge article)

NASCAR had multiple issues to juggle that weekend. The A-W track surface came apart resulting in the shortening of the race and resulting riot. But the France contingent also had their eyes and ears open for any fallout from the recent banning of Curtis Turner and Tim Flock because of their association with the Teamsters Union.

With eyes in the backs of their heads looking for Turner, the track problems, fires in the pits, a riot, teams taking matters into their own hands, overwhelmed law enforcement, etc., about the only thing the evening lacked was pestilence and a locust swarm.

Source: S partanburg Herald Journal

Source: Charleston News And Courier

Top 10 Finishers

Finish Driver Car
1 Junior Johnson Pontiac
2 Joe Weatherly Pontiac
3 Rex White Chevrolet
4 Ned Jarrett Chevrolet
5 Emanuel Zervakis Chevrolet
6 Jim Paschal Pontiac
7 Tommy Irwin Chevrolet
8 Johnny Allen Chevrolet
9 Jack Smith Pontiac
10 Nelson Stacy Ford

updated by @tmc-chase: 06/19/17 01:27:25PM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
08/13/13 05:27:40PM
4,073 posts

Montoya out after this season


Stock Car Racing History

Guessing that opens the door for Ganassi to promote Kyle Larson before anyone else's lawyer tries to pry him away from Chip and Felix.

Possible that JPM goes to the soon-to-be-former Phoenix Racing rumored to have been bought by Turner-Scott Motorsports guy? Had also heard one of his NW guys such as Justin Allgaier could get promoted. But until full investment is made, new culture is set, etc., its possible the team would need a proven Cup guy. Just knee jerk reaction to one possible destination.

TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
08/13/13 11:09:15AM
4,073 posts

August 13, 1954: Lee Petty wins at Southern States Fairgrounds


Stock Car Racing History


August 13, 1954: Driving a #42 Chrysler, Lee Petty wins his sixth race of the season in a 200-lap, 100-mile race at Southern States Fairgrounds in Charlotte, North Carolina. The event was the first Grand National race at the track, and GN races continued to be promoted on the Carolina half-mile, dirt track through 1961.

Finding information for this race was really tough. I'm grateful for Perry Allen Wood's book, Silent Speedways of the Carolinas, to help give some tips about this lost track. While his book also didn't have a lot of info about this particular race, his explanation of the former location of the track helped me document a bit about the then and now of the site.

Read on for more:

http://bench-racing.blogspot.com/2013/08/august-13-1954-lee-scores-southern.html


updated by @tmc-chase: 08/13/17 11:29:42AM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
08/13/15 08:50:44AM
4,073 posts

Racing History Minute - August 13, 1950


Stock Car Racing History


From Daily Times News of Burlington NC.


updated by @tmc-chase: 08/13/17 11:28:48AM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
08/13/13 01:05:18PM
4,073 posts

Racing History Minute - August 13, 1950


Stock Car Racing History

Found this bit of trivia re: Roberts' win at:

http://sports.yahoo.com/irl/news?slug=ycn-8645779

At the time of his victory, Fireball was the youngest driver to win a GN / Cup race. Even after 63 years, he remains the 5th youngest to win one. The top 5 - youngest to "oldest":

Joey Logano - June 28, 2009 - Loudon - 19 years, 1 month, 4 days.

Trevor Bayne - February 20, 2011 - Daytona 500 - 20 years, 0 months, 1 day

Kyle Busch - September 4, 2005 - California Speedway - 20 years, 4 months, 2 days

Donald Thomas - November 16, 1952 - Lakewood Speedway - 20 years, 4 months, 6 days

Fireball Roberts - August 13, 1950 - Occoneechee - 21 years, 6 months, 24 days

TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
08/13/13 12:23:19PM
4,073 posts

Racing History Minute - August 13, 1950


Stock Car Racing History


Couple of photos I found.

Fireball is surrounded by folks after his win. Almost like a 1950s era game of Where's Waldo. You can see him with his hand raised in the center of the photo.

Roberts in "victory lane" such that it existed.


updated by @tmc-chase: 08/13/17 11:28:01AM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
08/13/13 10:48:19AM
4,073 posts

August 12, 1956: Tim Flock


Stock Car Racing History

In an interesting scheduling move, NASCAR held a convertible series race on the same day as the GN race and in a neighboring state. While the GN cars raced in Wisconsin, the ragtops ran a 200-lap, 50-mile race on the quarter-mile Flat Rock Speedway in Michigan. The race was the 2nd and final convertible race at Flat Rock - with the first one being just 6 weeks earlier and won by Curtis Turner.

The August 12, 1956 convertible race was won by Allen Adkins. I know nothing about Adkins beyond what I gleaned from Racing-Reference.info. He ran 14 GN races and 33 convertible races from 1954-1957.

Flat Rock Speedway still operates today and is owned by ARCA.

The August 12, 1956 Flat Rock race actually had some pretty heavy-hitters in it - drivers who chose not to run in the GN race at Road America.

Finish Driver Car
1 Allen Adkins Dodge
2 Dick Joslin Dodge
3 Larry Odo Chevrolet
4 Bill Poor Chevrolet
5 Bob Beck Chevrolet
6 Bob Welborn Chevrolet
7 Larry Frank Mercury
8 Bun Emery Mercury
9 Norman Schihl Ford
10 Tom Pistone Chevrolet
11 Bill Brown Chevrolet
12 Danny Letner Dodge
13 Curtis Turner Ford
14 Don Corley Ford
15 Don Oldenberg Buick
16 Jimmie Lewallen Chevrolet
17 Joe Weatherly Ford
18 Glen Wood Ford
19 Jimmy Massey Chevrolet
20 Art Binkley Plymouth
21 Mel Larson Ford
22 Possum Jones Chevrolet
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
08/12/13 05:49:05PM
4,073 posts

August 12, 1956: Tim Flock


Stock Car Racing History


Randy Myers collection  includes this photo of Billy Myers and Bill Stroppe - presumably to promote the race at Road America. The pre-race promo must have rubbed off on race mojo because Billy finished 2nd to Flock, who was also racing a Stroppe Mercury.

And here is a third Stoppe Mercury with BOBBY Myers at the wheel getting serviced during the race. (Billy Myers raced 14 in the event.)

And the race winner Flock also getting service from his crew.


updated by @tmc-chase: 08/25/17 10:26:26AM
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
08/12/13 05:35:41PM
4,073 posts

August 12, 1956: Tim Flock


Stock Car Racing History

The race even made the August 20, 1956 issue of Sports Illustrated.

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1131825/index.htm

They Laughed When Nascar's Stock Cars Took To The Road At Elkhart Lake, But Tim Flock Gave The Show A Detroit Surprise

by Kenneth Rudeen

The way I figure it," drawled Lee Petty , a grizzled veteran of the stock car racing circuits, before the start of an extraordinary event last weekend, "this race will be won by the driver who can go the fastest the slowest."

Petty was talking about a 250-mile stock car race on the nation's finest road circuit, the punishing four-mile Road America course near Elkhart Lake , Wis. It was extraordinary because it was held on a road course, a thing so rare in recent American stock car racing that some oldtimers were casting back to the Elgin , Ill. races of more than two decades ago for a suitable precedent.

Moreover, the race, which was a $15,000 leg on the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing 's Grand National championship, had been given the blessing of the Federation Internationale de l'Automobile and was to undergo the personal scrutiny of Hubert Schroeder, secretary of the Commission Sportive Internationale, the sporting arm of the FIA. And beyond that, the race was to be witnessed by the top brass of the U.S. organizations most often mentioned as possible successors to the race-sanctioning authority that was relinquished by the AAA after last year's Le Mans , namely NASCAR 's Bill France ; Duane Carter, of the United States Auto Club ; and Jim Kimberly , of the Sports Car Club of America .

There was plenty of speculation on how the U.S. stock cars would stand up on a road course. They still had to prove that their brakes were tough enough and their suspension systems sturdy enough to endure the 62-lap grind. This would be no customary spin around a flat oval track, where all the turns are to the left.

Practice for the 250-mile race scotched a widespread assumption that American cars would not handle well enough on Road America's tight corners and rugged grades to maintain respectable speeds. Lap times as low as three minutes six seconds were reporteda healthy 77.4 mph average that compared better than expected with some of the fastest tours by high performance sports cars. At starting time on Sunday, delayed 35 minutes by rain, 25 American cars were lined up, followed by a Jaguar Mark VII sedan, winner of NASCAR 's 100-mile race for under 3,500 cc. cars (it was to tool steadily, if hopelessly, through the race) and four Renaults.

Up front were the fastest qualifiers, including three cars from the stable of Carl Kiekhaefer , the volatile Wisconsin manufacturer whose greatest pleasure is defeating the factory teams. Despite his many victories Kiekhaefer has become disaffected with the racing game, but only the foolhardy would have discounted his chances Sunday. With Elzie (Buck) Baker, current leader in Grand National point standings, in the pole car (a Dodge D-500 which averaged 76.3 mph in the qualifying three-lap heats), Junior Johnson in the second row in a Ford and Al (Speed) Thompson in the third row in another Dodge D-500, Kiekhaefer was in his usual strong position.

At the dip of the starter's flag Baker sprinted into the lead in the white Dodge, closely pursued by wiry Tim" Flock, last year's NASCAR champion, in one of four bright red-and-white factory Mercurys and Marvin Panch 's hot Ford . Mechanical trouble soon forced Junior Johnson's withdrawal, but Baker increased his lead doggedly through the early laps.

From back in the pack came Curtis Turner , Virginia lumberman, charging up to second place in a yellow-and-white Ford .

For a time a flurry of pit stops for refueling obscured the issue. Then the race became a dogfight between Baker, Turner and Panch , with Panch taking over on the 15th lap for a long run. Speedy Thompson pushed the second Kiekhaefer Dodge along steadily in fourth place until Baker ran out of gasoline on the 20th lap, nearly a mile from the pits. No man to leave a teammate in distress, Thompson eased his machine up behind Baker's and pushed it to the pits, losing valuable time, of course.

When Turner lost his brakes a few minutes later and skidded into the hay-bales on the last corner the Virginian was out of the race and Thompson was back in contention, followed by Frank Mundy's Chrysler 300 -B and Flock 's sweet-running Mercury.

As Panch , driving very fast and very hard, added to his lead, little Joe Weatherly made a strong move with his Ford and took over the second position. After another siege of hectic pit stops, just after the halfway point, Panch emulated Baker by running out of gas three-quarters of a mile from home. This time it was Ford Driver Glenn (Fireball) Roberts who took over the pushing chore, and although Panch moved briskly back onto the course, he left it just as quickly with a misbehaving differential.

Thompson's Dodge, which had not lost as much time as might have been expected, now assumed command with considerable authority, achieving a solid margin over Weatherly 's Ford . Turning some laps at 75 mph, Thompson was driving with as much verve as if the race had just begun.

With 16 laps to go Weatherly turned into the pits, never to resume the chase. Thompson needed only to maintain a steady pace to hold off the threat of Flock , a distant second, and Flock 's Mercury teammate Billy Myers, the third man. But this was not to be Kiekhaefer 's day. Suddenly Thompson, last of the Kiekhaefer team, pitted for gas. That cost 48 seconds, reducing Thompson's lead over Flock to 23 seconds. And as he pulled back on the track, Thompson's motor sounded rough. His left exhaust pipe belched blue smoke. When he had to retire out on the course, Tim Flock grabbed the lead and kept it.

And so it was that the man who went the fastest the slowest won the race. Julius Timothy Flock of Atlanta , a man who has often proved that he knows how to pace himself and his car and who had driven the Mercury as smoothly and carefully as any man could, flashed over the finish line 25 seconds ahead of Billy Myers' identical Mercury. Flock 's brakes, specially ventilated in front by air scoops and in the rear by electric blowers, were still sound. His time of three hours 29 minutes 50 seconds averaged out to 71.485 mph. Fireball Roberts brought his Ford in third. Paul Goldsmith drove a Chevrolet to fourth.

"This road racing," said Flock , "is all right."

  244