Showing posts with label johnny beauchamp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label johnny beauchamp. Show all posts

Friday, May 3, 2013

May 3, 1959 - Lee Monopolizes Martinsville

May 3, 1959: - Starting deep in the field in 24th, Lee Petty motors to the front, leads 337 laps, and wins the Virginia 500 at Martinsville Speedway in Virginia. Driving an Oldsmobile, he won by 5 laps over runner-up Johnny Beauchamp who had relief-driver help from Larry Frank.

The win was Lee's 40th career Grand National victory and his third win of the season (the second was at North Wilkesboro).  Coincidentally, Beauchamp also finished second to Lee in his first win of the season in the inaugural Daytona 500.

Bobby Johns (who later raced for Petty Engineering) and Joe Lee Johnson qualified on the front row.


Richard Petty made his Martinsville debut. Like Lee, he struggled in qualifying and placed 25th, one spot behind his dad. But again like Lee, he picked his way through the field and finished 7th. Lee's victory was the final of his three wins at Martinsville. With a solid debut, Richard picked up where Lee left off and won 15 times in his career on the Virginia half-mile.

NASCAR Hall of Famer Junior Johnson finished 3rd with relief driver help from Ned Jarrett, a fellow, future HOFer. Greg Fielden notes in his book, Forty Years of Stock Car Racing - Volume 2:
Johnson was holding better than a lap lead when he pitted on lap 308, giving the lead to Petty for good. A long stay in the pits dropped him to third place. On lap 347, Johnson pitted again and passed out. Jarrett took the wheel and drove the car home third. Johnson later said exhaust fumes had overcome him. ~ p. 25

With deadline pressures to submit race reports to sports editors, mistakes can be made by reporters or complete information may not be available at press time. The following race report notes Roy Tyner finished fourth with Tiger Tom Pistone in 5th. However, when NASCAR posted the final results, the two spots were reversed.

Source: St. Petersburg Times via Google News Archive
TMC

Friday, February 22, 2013

February 22, 1959 - Lee Wins 1st Daytona 500

February 22, 1959: After almost a decade of running on the Daytona Beach combination course of sand and Highway A1A, Lee Petty races his Oldsmobile to victory in the inaugural Daytona 500 raced on the brand spankin' new 2-1/2 mile Daytona International Speedway. It took a few days for NASCAR to make it official - but in the end, Petty was credited with the win.

The NASCAR Grand National regulars historically raced on a hodge-podge of tracks - many quarter-mile or half-mile in length - most of them dirt but with a few of them paved. Notable exceptions included Darlington 1.3 mile egg-shaped oval, Langhorne, Pennsylvania's one-mile dirt circle, and the fast runs down A1A. The drivers didn't have experience on long, fast tracks. They did know, however, about set-ups, pit stops, crude gas mileage calculations, and a few strengths and vulnerabilities of expected competition. This experience likely helped in projecting what may happen at Bill France, Sr.'s new speedway.

But some drivers were green as grass and likely had no idea what they were about to face. One example? Richard Petty. The future King Richard saddled up - in an Oldsmobile convertible! He was bucked off early though with engine problems, completed only 8 laps, finished a peasant-like 57th, and spent the rest of the race in the pits cheering on his dad. 

Young Richard wasn't the only one piloting a ragtop. The first 500 was officially sanctioned as a combination hard-top and convertible race. It may seem ludicrous today with the benefit of hindsight to imagine racing a convertible at high-speed on a superspeedway. Drivers racing Indy roadsters, however, had been racing for decades at similar speeds with full-on winds on their chins. Also, NASCAR drivers were afraid of fire more than anything else. So the opportunity to escape from a convertible may have seemed a better way to mitigate risk than in a full-bodied sedan.

Photo courtesy of Ray Lamm from RacersReunion.com
Bob Welborn - who at times during his career raced for Petty Enterprises and Julian Petty (Lee's brother) - won the pole to set the pace for the 59-car field. The relatively inexperienced Richard Petty remarkably lined up sixth - an early sign the Randleman Rocket would take to Daytona over the next three decades like a duck to water.

A few additional trivia nuggets about the race are:
  • Several drivers in the first 500 continued or developed solid NASCAR careers. But only a few are still with us. Looking at the finishing order, NASCAR Hall of Famers Richard Petty, Glen Wood, and Junior Johnson are still alive as is 1961 Daytona 500 and 1966 World 600 winner Marvin Panch. Of the top 10 finishers, however, only two remain: Jim Reed (6th) and Tom Pistone (8th). TEASER ALERT: Return tomorrow for a post about Tiger Tom.
  • The race was run with zero cautions. Think about that for a moment. First race for the NASCAR guys on a true superspeedway - mixture of hard-top sedans and convertibles - fastest speeds in the history of stock car racing - drivers sensing the draft for the first time - and so on. Yet, no cautions. Truly remarkable.
  • Fifty-nine cars started the race - 59. Did I mention no cautions? Almost half the starters raced Chevrolets, and 20+ others piloted cars from Ford Motor Company. The two Petty entries were the only two Oldsmobiles in the field.
  • Bob Said made his first and only NASCAR Grand National start. Who?? Bob Said's actual name was Boris Said, Jr. He also raced bobsleds for the U.S. Olympic team. So Bob Said raced bobsleds - perfect. And yep, Bob was the father of contemporary driver and "Said Head" fan favorite, Boris Said III. 
Source: Wikipedia
To this day, its simply remarkable to realize three cars could finish side-by-side-by side after 500 miles with no cautions. Joe Weatherly was on the outside but a lap down. Lee was in the middle, and Beauchamp hugged the inside rail.

Most in attendance believed Petty was the winner when the threesome flashed across the line. But Beauchamp was brought to victory lane and awarded the win. Lee was confident that he was the winner and headed for victory lane also. In the photo below, Petty's car can be seen at the end of the ruts in the infield grass. Beachamp's "winning car" is hidden a bit by the throng of folks around it.

Photo courtesy of Dog427435 at Jalopy Journal's Hokey Ass Message Board

Source: Spartanburg Herald via Google News Archive
The drawn-out drama by NASCAR head honcho (and owner/promoter of Daytona International Speedway) Bill France, Sr. as to the winner of the race is pretty well known - even amongst the most novice of NASCAR fans. But there was a bit on debate about who finished third, fourth and fifth as well. Weatherly who was magically caught in the photo finish of Beachamp and Petty was eventually placed fifth.

Charley Griffith, a driver with a career of only seventeen Grand National races, wound up third - the only top 5 of his limited career. Griffith hailed from Red Bank, TN, near Chattanooga - home to See Rock City, Moon Pies, Boyd Speedway, occasional Bench Racing contributor Banktruck, and to TMC for nearly a decade.

NASCAR Hall of Famer Cotton Owens finished fourth after needing a splash of gas with one lap to go. His decision to pit rather than chance it cost him big money as Griffith finished third - at least as prize money was considered in that era. Of course what isn't mentioned is the what Cotton may have lost had he chosen to stick it out, not pitted, and run out anyway. The hit to his bank account may have been even larger.

Source: Spartanburg Herald-Journal via Google News Archive
After three days of "reviewing the evidence", NASCAR finally reversed its race-day decision and declared Lee Petty as the winner. For those in attendance, the decision was a yawner as most knew from the get-go Lee rightfully won the race. But the PR-media minded France Sr. played the drama to his advantage. The finish and the debate about who finished ahead of whom remains amongst the top 5 or 10 NASCAR stories of all time to this day.

Source: Daytona Beach Morning Journal via Google News Archive



TMC

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Racing's Analogy To The Fiscal Cliff

As is the norm, the politicians on both sides of the aisle in Washington DC once again demonstrated why they should have ridden the short-bus to school as kids. I'm not sure what it is about the magnetic pull of the District, but it always seems to attract the most gutless, spineless, short-sighted, self-centered, egotistical, pocket-lining bunch of cowards our great nation has to offer. Worse yet - we choose to send them there. In many cases, we send them there for decades.

So what do we do? One, get educated about the issues. Two, learn who your elected officials are - literally - at all level, local, state and Federal. Most of the bums we have up there start their cronyism at the grassroots level long before they milk the taxpayers of all states. Three, find some degree of humor amidst the crying, worrying and gnashing of teeth.

With that as an intro, I present racing's version of the Fiscal Cliff.

1960 Rebel 300 at Darlington - Johnny Allen takes the fiscal cliff to the people...


1961 Daytona 500 qualifying race #1 - The King leads a rebellion outside the kingdom


1961 Daytona 500 qualifying race #2 - Lee Petty and Johnny Beachamp both had enough...


1965 Southern 500 - Cale Yarborough says See Yaaaaaaaaa...


1993 Die Hard 500 - Jimmy Horton leaves the yard at Talladega...


Late models can relate to this crisis (pick it up about 1:30 mark)...


 And even Kasey Kahne in a return to his roots fully understands the severity of the fiscal cliff crisis (start at 1:15)...



TMC