Two weeks later at Ontario Motor Speedway, Foyt and the Wood Brothers returned the favor. Foyt topped the two Petty cars of Buddy Baker and the King to capture the win. Foyt and the Woods skipped the next four races. Petty ripped off three straight wins at Richmond, Rockingham and Hickory; and David Pearson pocketed his final win with Holman Moody in the Southeastern 500 at Bristol.
The annual race at Atlanta Motor Speedway in today's era stirs a good bit of debate.
- What is the ideal date?
- How do you gamble against the weather?
- Why aren't the stands full?
- Why doesn't the track get more support from the greater Atlanta MSA?
Rather than liquidating the track's assets for cents on the dollar and stiffing a bunch of lenders and investors, the court fortunately allowed the board of directors to proceed with a restructuring of its finances and operations - including the running of the Atlanta 500 in April.
Source: Wilmington Star-News via Google News Archive |
Georgia's governor, Jimmy Carter, professed to be a NASCAR fan. He attended the 1971 Atlanta 500 as he did other races at the track. When elected President, he also invited many NASCAR drivers and others from racing to a dinner at the White House.
Source: Fort Scott Tribune via Google News Archive |
The statement was provocative in 1971. Had the quote been attributed to Foyt - or anyone else - in today's PC climate, Twitter would explode, the driver would be sent away for weeks to undergo sensitivity training, sponsors would likely bail, and TV "partners" would inexplicably apologize on behalf of the offending driver.
Foyt was pissed, however, as he insisted he did not make the remark. Before the racing action got underway at Atlanta, A.J. wanted to speak to the drivers as a group, explain the situation, and apologize for the whole hullabaloo.
Source: Spartanburg Herald via Google News Archive |
Foyt seized the lead when the green was dropped for the first time, and he led the first 36 laps. Petty then paced the field for the next 15 circuits. The exchange of the lead between the two set the tone for the rest of the race. Cale Yarborough and David Pearson - a past and future driver for the Wood Brothers - each led some laps as did Pete Hamilton.
The race, however, was mainly a battle between Foyt and Petty. Each time a driver led a lap or two, Foyt returned to the point for a double-digits chunk of laps.
Despite Foyt being the lap-bully, the 43 Plymouth hung tough. With about 25 laps to go, Foyt hit pit road for the final time. Petty inherited the lead once again and was hoping he'd have enough fuel to stretch it to the end. Instead, crew chief Dale Inman called Petty to pit road seven laps after Foyt's stop. The Plymouth simply didn't have enough gas to go the distance.
Foyt reclaimed the lead for the final time during Petty's stop. He led the remaining 13 laps and won for the second time in only three starts of the 1971 season. Gov. Carter greeted the winner in victory lane along with Miss Falstaff. The late Barney Hall handled the PA duties.
Source: Spartanburg Herald via Google News Archive |
True to his word, Foyt did sue Time, Inc., parent of Sports Illustrated, for libel. Two years later in 1973, the court awarded him $75,000.
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