Forum Activity for @dave-fulton

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
08/12/11 04:55:40PM
9,138 posts

"Not Taking Any Kurt Busch Lip," Says Jimmie Johnson


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Jimmie Johnson vents about Kurt Busch .

by Associated Press WCNC.com Posted on August 12, 2011 at 3:21 PM

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. -- Jimmie Johnson says he wasn't about to take any lip from Kurt Busch. The two drivers confronted each other after last week's NASCAR Cup race at Pocono. They had slammed into each other on the final lap. Johnson is a five-time Cup champion, and he and Busch have had dustups in the past. Johnson said at a news conference at Watkins Glen International on Friday that he was angered by Busch's remarks as Johnson walked away following their argument in the pits. Johnson says he thought things were settled and then "the guy gets real tough" and starts "running his mouth." On Sunday, Johnson accused Busch of trying to run him down. Busch contends Johnson made the first move. Busch finished third and Johnson fourth.


updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:02:07PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
08/15/11 11:16:35AM
9,138 posts

Sorry, Ladies... Dale, Jr. Wants to Stay Single (but does want kids)


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Not gonna get into any discussion about who's a team player and who's not, HOWEVER... I always remember Joe Weatherly's answer when asked the biggest differences between stock car racing and sports car racing. Joe answered, "Stock car drivers drink whiskey and chase women; sports car drivers drink wine and chase each other!" I attended a driver's meeting before an IMSA Camel GT race at Charlotte in 1984. The official in charge of the meeting stated that in the future, driver's wives and girlfriends wouldn't be allowed in the drivers' meeting. At that point, Doc Bundy (who is/was one of the funniest drivers I have ever met) asked if that also included a particular male driver's boyfriend. That brought down the house, but certainly didn't ingratiate Doc to that driver who I will not name, but you can probably guess if you ever followwed IMSA racing.
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
08/12/11 04:50:54PM
9,138 posts

Sorry, Ladies... Dale, Jr. Wants to Stay Single (but does want kids)


General

by CALEB TROOP / NewsChannel 36 Staff WCNC.com Posted on August 12, 2011 at 11:37 AM CHARLOTTE, N.C. One of NASCARs most eligible bachelors wants to stay that way. In a rare glimpse inside Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s personal life, the 37-year-old driver told Speeds Race Hub he has no real interest in being married. "I haven't changed my life a whole lot in the last eight years," he said. "And I don't want to change it that much." But Earnhardt Jr. did say at some point he would like to have kids. But thats not something Ive got planned out," he told the show. In Forbes magazine's most recent list of NASCARs highest-paid drivers, Earnhardt Jr. topped the list, earning a reported $29 million in 2010. Hendrick Motorsports teammate Jeff Gordon came in second with $25 million last year.


updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:02:07PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
08/12/11 07:49:19PM
9,138 posts

Everyone loves a good mystery...


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Boy, the more you read, the scarier it gets. His brother, John was murdered in 1988, per The Chicago Tribune:

Car-theft Figure Slain At His Home

August 16, 1988

By John O`Brien.

A convicted Chicago-area car thief and suspected chop-shop operator was shot to death early Monday at his home in Schererville, Ind., south of Hammond, according to authorities. John Emery Pronger, 64, was slain at about 3 a.m. as he stood just inside the front door of the house in which he was living with his former wife at 2547 Spring Hill Dr., in a fashionable Schererville subdivision. Pronger`s older brother, Bob Pronger, a onetime Blue Island race car driver also linked by authorities to stolen car rackets, vanished in 1971, a suspected victim of crime syndicate killers, according to law enforcement officials. Schererville police said John Pronger was shot twice. The first shot was fired through the front door, with the bullet piercing his left wrist and then lodging in a wall. The gunman then forced open the door and fired a second shot, fatally wounding Pronger in the chest, police said. Police said Pronger was killed by a .357 Magnum handgun firing hollow-point ammunition, or dum-dum bullets. Investigators said it appeared that Pronger, clad in pajamas, had responded to a knock at the front door. They said the gunman apparently started firing as soon as he knew Pronger was on the other side of the door. ``There were no signs of burglary or a struggle except for the front door being shoved open,`` said Detective Dennis Zagrocki of the Schererville Police Department. Police said Pronger was living in the house with his ex-wife, Christine Loprete, 36. The house is owned by her father, Adam Peciak of suburban Calumet Park. Police were trying to trace the ownership of five cars parked on the property. Zagrocki said that Loprete was unable to provide information about the shooting. She told police that Pronger hadn`t mentioned to her that he had received any threats or that he had reason to fear for his safety. Zagrocki and other investigators declined to speculate on a motive for the shooting. Pronger had an extensive arrest record dating from the 1940s and was twice convicted on federal charges of taking cars stolen in Chicago across the Indiana state line to be resold. Pronger and his brother, Bob, both natives of Blue Island, first came to the attention of Chicago police in 1946 when they were arrested on charges of trying to steal the car of bandleader Art Kassel. Starting in the 1960s the Prongers were suspected by law enforcement authorities of being active in the chop-shop rackets in which stolen cars are taken to garages and ``chopped up`` for their parts, which are then resold. In the 1970s the Chicago crime syndicate began taking control of chop shops in the metropolitan area, including those near Schererville and elsewhere in Lake County, Ind. Those who resisted or were suspected of being informants were killed. As many as 14 gangland killings have been attributed by police to the so-called ``chop-shop wars.`` Bob Pronger, then 49, vanished on June 17, 1971, as federal authorities sought to question him. His body was never found, but a former chop-shop operator turned government informant told a Senate subcommittee in 1979 that Pronger had been killed by William ``Billy`` Dauber, a reputed mob assassin and onetime friend of the Pronger brothers. Dauber and his wife, Charlotte, were slain by shotgun and rifle fire on July 2, 1980, as they rode in their car on a rural road in Will County. Federal investigators later acknowledged that Dauber had become a government informant.

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
08/12/11 07:31:38PM
9,138 posts

Everyone loves a good mystery...


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From everything I have read so far, there are a million different theories, including Witness Protection, Mexico and dead. I wasn't familiar with the name and stories, but they are pretty scary. Wouldn't want to run in his crowd.

That's Bob Pronger in #99leading Lee Petty on the beach road course.
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
08/11/11 11:17:39PM
9,138 posts

I Saw Cotton Owens "Unretire" & Beat His Own Driver, David Pearson at Richmond in 1964


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I've seen a lot of historical races over the years, but until we had Cotton Owens as a guest at Richmond in 1998 celebrating the 50th Anniversary of NASCAR, I didn't realize the significance of his September 14, 1964 win in the Capital City 300 on the 1/2-mile dirt layout. It was Cotton's final win and next to last race. I remember the car like it was yesterday. It was a white 1964 Dodge, with a black roof and black #5, painted just like his other entry, David Pearson in his white 1964 Dodge with red roof and red #6.

Cotton had run just one race in 1963, at his hometown Spartanburg track. As Cotton told it at Richmond in 1998, he kinda needed to bring David down a notch. Cotton's big beef with David was that he was scaring the pit crew half to death charging into the pits. Cotton preached smoothness to him on pit stops, but David continued to terrorize the crew. Finally, Cotton decided to come out of retirement and bet David he could beat him by making smooth pit stops. Cotton was good to his word. He beat David that day for his final Grand National win, while David placed second. Cotton ran one more race, six days later in Hillsboro, finishing 2nd to David's 14th. David unquestionably learned how to make a pit stop, a procedure he and the Wood Brothers would later refine to perfection. Who knows how many races David could have won if he had competed a full schedule throughout his career. I know I am priviliged to have seen Cotton not only win his final race, but to outrun and teach the Silver Fox a valuable lesson while doing it.

Cotton's #5 & #6 - not sure where or year

The photo caption is incorrect- Richmond, VA NASCAR 150-Mile Race

Cotton's Richmond race win was considered historically significant enough that NASCAR.com did the following feature story on it earlier this year, but I was there!

Owens taught younger Pearson a lesson in 1964

By Mark Aumann, NASCAR.COM April 29, 2011

David Pearson was considered one of the most savvy drivers in NASCAR history, but even the Silver Fox needed to learn a valuable lesson in the 1964 Capital City 300 at the Atlantic Rural Fairgrounds, now known as Richmond International Raceway. And the teacher was none other than Cotton Owens, recently selected as one of the five newest nominees for the NASCAR Hall of Fame. The 29-year-old Pearson was in the midst of his breakout season. The surprise winner of the 1961 World 600 at Charlotte, Pearson had gone winless the next two seasons, including as driver of Owens' Dodges in 1963. But Pearson broke through with a victory at Richmond in March and went on to record seven more short-track wins during the summer of 1964. Owens was considered "King of the Modifieds" in his younger days, winning more than 100 features during his career. And he had had pretty decent success at the Cup level, scoring Pontiac's first win in the series at Daytona Beach in 1957. But he hadn't raced competitively in two years and was more interested in building and owning cars. However, Owens felt that Pearson was trying to do too much on his own. So when the series returned to the fairgrounds on the east side of town on Sept. 14, 1964, Owens entered a second car with the idea of showing the young buck how things should be done. "I was talking to David about how it took more than just the driver to win races," the 86-year-old Owens said Thursday from his shop in Spartanburg, S.C. "It had to be a whole team effort. He came through the ranks like I did. "In Modifieds, you didn't need nobody but yourself. So he had to be talked to, to learn that it had to be a team effort. That was the reason why I came out of retirement, to show him I could use the pit crew there and win the race." Owens was impressed with the raw talent Pearson -- also a native of Spartanburg -- possessed, especially on dirt bullrings. And Owens knew how to build fast cars. "I always had a good working deal with dirt, with all of my cars," Owens said. "Most anybody could drive them on dirt. "Pearson, he drove more like I did. That's the reason why I liked his style of driving. You just couldn't beat him. At any race track he went to, you had to work hard to beat him." The car had finished fifth with Jim Paschal behind the wheel in the Daytona 500, so Owens knew it was as competitive as Pearson's ride. "They were both '64 Dodge Coronets with the Hemi engine," Owens said. "I actually was one of the last to qualify and I tied the outside pole man, which gave me the second-fastest time." Owens started third, with Pearson ninth. Billy Wade took the pole in his Mercury, while Junior Johnson's Ford was fourth-fastest. And those four cars dominated all day, with Wade and Johnson swapping the lead throughout the first half of the 300-lapper, with Owens and Pearson staying in contention. With Wade fading and eventually dropping out with engine issues, Owens passed Johnson for the lead on Lap 170 and led the next 17 circuits. But Johnson went back in front and appeared to have enough to hold off the two Dodges until his engine let go 36 laps from the finish line. At that point, Owens had a full lap advantage on Pearson and won going away. He remembered being exhausted by the time he pulled in for the post-race celebration. "I gave out at the end of that race," Owens said. "I couldn't lift my arms at the end of that race, I was so tired." Just to hammer home the point, Owens raced again the following weekend at Hillsborough, N.C. "I was leading the race there and I had a deal with the right rear tire," Owens said. "Every time I'd back off the throttle, it'd start sliding the right rear tire. And I couldn't get in the throttle and Ned Jarrett could, and I ran second." Pearson apparently got the message. Two years later, he piloted Owens' cars to 15 wins and the 1966 NASCAR championship, and went on to amass a total of 105 victories and three championship trophies. During six seasons, the two combined for 27 wins in 170 races. And what did Pearson say to his boss after that race in 1964? "I don't remember exactly," Owens said. "I think he was pretty mad about it. I don't think I outdrove him or anything. It was just a teacher teaching a young one how to do something."


updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:02:07PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
08/11/11 05:04:36PM
9,138 posts

From Pocono to Houston?


General

I'm guessing maybe the Camping World Truck Series tractor trailer driverwho took out the Pocono flagstand last weekend has found new employment driving in Houston judging from this breaking news photo out of Houston:


updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:02:07PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
08/12/11 11:35:07AM
9,138 posts

The Last American Hero is Junior Johnson. Yes! - Read it online free


General

Jim, I, too loved Wolfe's 1979 "The Right Stuff" which I read in 1981 after having been put onto it by David Little, a former Air Force pilot and Director of Wrangler Special Events at the time. I was familiar with Chuck Yeager from the 1961 movie "X-15", whose timing was about as bad as the X-15 itself, what with the Mercury 7 stuff happening. By the time Yeager came around NASCAR as spokesman for Goodwrench, he seemed an old friend. Interestingly enough, Wolfe was born and raised in Richmond, but I'm not aware of him ever coming around the Richmond track. He was writing in NY when he did the Esquire Junior stuff. No doubt as to Wolfe's liberal leaning. Another of his early books I read was The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test which chronicled the antics of pre-hippie Ken Kesey and his band of Merry Pranksters around Northern California while tripping on LSD.
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
08/11/11 03:18:25PM
9,138 posts

The Last American Hero is Junior Johnson. Yes! - Read it online free


General

For some reason I was thinking of gumball tires today and trying to remember when NASCAR instituted the rule of starting the race on the same set of tires you qualified on, which for all practical purposes outlawed the supersoft "gumball" qualifying tires. When I googled the term "gumball tires", I was taken to the line in the famed Tom Wolfe article about Junior Johnson... the line that reads:
"when somebody like Junior Johnson really pushes it on a qualifying run, there will be a ring of blue smoke up over the whole goddamned track, a ring like an oval halo over the whole thing from the gumballs burning, and some good old boy will say, "Great smokin' blue gumballs god almighty dog! There goes Junior Johnson!"

That quote is from the March 1965 Esquire Magazine article by Wolfe titled Junior Johnson is the Last American Hero. Yes! that made Junior a national folk hero and was the basis for the Jeff Bridges Twentieth Century Fox movie, loosely based on Junior's life.

Somewhere in my archives I have the Wolfe book of anthologies titled Kandy Kolored Tangerine Flake Streamline Baby that includes the Junior story and others about car fabricator George Barris, etc.

But until I stumbled on it today, I did not realize that Esquire Magazine had republished the entire March 1965 article online, free to read, as part of what the magazine has picked as The Seven Greatest Articles in its history.

If you have never read it, you are in for a treat.Doesn't matter if you're a Junior fan or not or a northerner or southerner or whatever. The article gives a vivid description of 1964 stock car racing. It is set at North Wilkesboro, Junior's last race in a Dodge before switching to Ford. Not to be missed is the description of Linda Vaughn astride the Pure Firebird, the image of all the drivers landing their planes at the Wilkes airport, and the general description of the rural south and what constituted a "good ole boy."

I have read this story a gazillion times in my life and never tire of it. Here's the link:

http://www.esquire.com/features/life-of-junior-johnson-tom-wolfe-0365


updated by @dave-fulton: 04/08/17 02:27:35AM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
08/11/11 02:53:26PM
9,138 posts

Linda Petty Praise Report


General

That is wonderful news to hear.
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