02/14/14
February
14, 2014 |
Fifty five years ago in 1959, Bill France's dream came true as the
Daytona Speedway was completed and the doors were opened for practice and
qualifying for the inaugural Daytona 500. Seventy-five cars were on hand and
in time trials, Glenn Fireball Roberts took the pole with a speed of 140.581
mph in a 1959 Pontiac. Second fastest was Tim Flock in a 1959 Ford
Thunderbird. During the opening week, the track claimed its first life when
Marshall Teague rolled his Indy type car five times before being ejected
onto the racetrack.
Fifty years ago in 1964, Ford
products were clearly outclassed in Daytona 500qualifing.Fourty six entries
were on hand with Paul Goldsmith taking the pole with a speed of 174.910 mph
in a Plymouth. Richard Petty, also in a Plymouth, was second fastest. The
Fords were 15 mph slower.
Forty five years ago in 1969, Buddy
Baker set a new qualifying mark as he toured the Daytona oval at 189.901
mph. Bobby Isaac was second fastest.
Forty years ago in 1974, the
Modifieds were not part of the World Series at New Smyrna but they did have
a spot on the venue at the Daytona Speedway where they were scheduled for a
200 mile event on the 4.1 mile infield road course. Among those entered were
Bob Park, Geoff Bodine, Denis Giroux, Bugsy Stevens, Jerry Cook, Richie
Evans and Charlie Jarzombek. Also on the entry list were Winston Cup drivers
Bobby Allison and Tiny Lund and road racers Paul Newman and Gene Felton.
Thirty five years ago in 1979, the
Modifieds were out in full force at New Smyrna. Among those entered were
Richie Evans, Ronnie Bouchard, Satch Worley, Moose Hewitt, George Kent and
Charlie Jarzombek. Evans and Bouchard were also entered for the Daytona 200
event.
Thirty years ago in 1984 Cale
Yarborough became the first to break the 200mph barrier as he took the pole
position at Daytona with a run of 201.848 mph. It was not without incident
as he went on his roof before he completed his second lap. Terry Labonte was
the outside pole sitter. Neil Bonnett was the winner of the 50 lap Busch
Clash. Yarborough finished second and was followed by Buddy Baker and Joe
Ruttman. Richie Evans won the first two events at New Smyrna. Charlie
Jarzombek finished second, both nights. The modifieds were long gone from
Daytona.
Twenty five years ago in 1989, a law
suit between Tim Richmond and NASCAR for $20million was settled out of court
for an undisclosed amount. Ken Schrader had a good weekend as he won both
the Daytona 500 pole and the Busch Clash. Reggie Ruggerio was the opening
night winner at New Smyrna. Jamie Tomaino finished second and was followed
by Tom Baldwin and Mike Ewanitsko. Ewanitsko came back on night No.2 to take
the win over Ruggerio, Tomaino and Tony Jankowiac. Thirty modifieds were on
hand. On Sunday night, Ruggerio made it two out of three as Tomaino,
Baldwin, Dick Trickle and Frank Fleming rounded out the top five.
Twenty years ago in 1994, Neil
Bonnett lost his life in a practice crash at Daytona. Loy Allen Jr. became
the first rookie to win the Daytona 500 pole with a speed of 190.158mph.Dale
Earnhardt was second fastest. Jeff Gordon won the Busch Clash. Brett Bodine
finished second. Goodys Dash Champion Rodney Orr became the second fatality
of speedweeks after he hit the wall in turn two during practice. Ricky
Fuller was the opening night winner at New Smyrna as he beat out Steve Park,
Tom Baldwin, Jamie Tomaino and Ted Christopher. Richie Gallup won night No.2
and Fuller came back to win on Sunday night. Things were about to get ugly
with many drivers getting over aggressive. Tensions were building and would
boil over later in the week.
Fifteen years ago in 1999, opening
night at New Smyrna saw a full field of modifieds. The main event started at
12:30am on Saturday morning but the late hour didn't slow George Kent as he
led the 25 lap feature from pole to pole. Ted Christopher finished second
and was followed by Tim Arre, Jamie Tomaino, Eric Beers and Doug French. On
Saturday afternoon, 58 Winston Cup cars took time at the Daytona Speedway
for the Daytona 500 pole. Jeff Gordon toured the 2-1/2 mile speedway at
195.067mph and took the pole. Second fastest was rookie, Tony Stewart.
Saturday night at New Smyrna, Jamie Tomaino started on the outside pole and
led all 25 laps. For the second night in a row, Ted Christopher finished
second. George Kent finished third with Eric Beers, fourth. On Sunday at
Daytona, Mike Skinner won the Busch Shoot-out consi. Mark Martin got his
first Daytona win after starting 13th and leading 16 of the 25-lap contest.
Ken Schrader finished second. Jeff Gordon overshot his pit when he stopped
and was held for 15 seconds. Gordon chose not to reenter the event and
parked it. Bobby Gerhart won the ARCA 200 with Shauna Robinson, second. The
big excitement of the afternoon came when Joe Cooksie rear-ended and
destroyed the pace car. Sunday night at New Smyrna saw Jamie Tomaino leading
almost the entire distance until he broke a rocker arm and had to give way
to Ted Christopher. Tomaino managed to hang on for second and was followed
by Tim Arre.
Ten years ago in 2004, the action
began at the New Smyrna Speedway in Florida on Friday night, February 6. The
speedway actually opened on Thursday for competitor parking, tech inspection
and a practice session. There were 28 tour-type Modifieds and six SK-type
Modifieds on hand. Among the quickest in the first session of practice was
Donnie Lia, the 2003 NASCAR Featherlite Modified Tour Series Rookie of the
Year. Despite the fact that the weather was threatening, Round One of the
World Series at New Smyrna Speedway in Florida made it into the books. Ted
Christopher, of Plainville, CT went pole to pole to win the 25 lap modified
opener. The event, which went green for the first 22 laps, had only one
caution, that for Long Islander JR Bertuccio, who spun. Eric Beers, who had
dogged Christopher from the start, missed a shift on the re-start but
managed to recover and finish second. John Blewett III, who was driving
Christopher’s championship ride from 2003, finished third. George Kent and
Jeff Malave rounded out the top five. Donnie Lia finished sixth and
Bertuccio recovered from his spin to finish seventh. The temperature at New
Smyrna took a dive on Saturday night. Charlie Pasteryak, didn’t let the
chill in the air slow him down as he went pole to pole to win Round Two of
the modified portion of the World Series. Eric Beers, who finished second to
Ted Christopher on Friday night, finished second again with Christopher
third. Donnie Lia turned his program up a notch as he finished fourth.
Rounding out the top five was Kevin Goodale of Riverhead, NY. Numerous
cautions slowed the event, as the full moon syndrome was evident. Numerous
spins were the norm. Among the casualties were John Blewett III who hit a
spinning JR Bertuccio, head on. Blewett’s mount, the Joe Brady No.00
sustained severe damage and was removed to a local race shop for repairs.
Passing for position has been all but non-existent so far. The top cars are
pretty equal plus the cold temperatures produce less than ideal racing
conditions.
Over in Daytona, Dale Jarrett came out of no where to win the Busch
Shootout. Run on Sunday afternoons in previous years, the Shootout was moved
to prime time on Saturday night. While the front stretch grandstands looked
just about full, the surrounding area short tracks suffered. The same
situation could be seen in the New England and New York area during the
summer months when NEXTEL racing is done on Saturday night. At the Daytona
International Speedway on Sunday 46 NEXTEL Cup cars attempted to qualify for
the following Sunday’s Daytona 500. Greg Biffle in a Jack Roush Ford took
the pole position with a speed of 188.387 mph. Second fastest was Elliott
Sadler who went 188.355 mph. As a side note, former Waterford Speedbowl
modified driver Bob Gada Jr. is one of those who work in the Jack Roush
motor shop. On a sad note, 44 year old Ray Weaver, supervisor of the track
crew at Daytona was struck and killed on Sunday while out in the middle of
the track during a caution period. He was picking up debris left on the
speedway after a Goody’s Dash race incident. Ray Paprota, a paraplegic who
uses hand controls to drive his car, accidentally hit him.
Sunday night at New Smyrna ended up being another crash fest and another
night of virtually no passing. The upper groove of the ½ mile high-banked
speedway has not come in like many competitors expected it would. Donnie Lia
went pole to pole to win the 25-lap event over JR Bertuccio, Eric Beers,
George Kent and Ted Christopher. As drivers get frustrated accidents happen.
For the second night in a row John Blewett III saw his hopes for a decent
finish get trashed. After numerous tries to re-start the event after a lap
five caution Blewett found himself in the fence with his car suffering
severe damage. His crew had worked all night long after a Saturday night
crash to get the car back together. Blewett missed time trials and was
forced to start the main event in the rear. It only took him five laps to
get to the top five when bad luck struck again. The Modifieds had a night
off on Monday, February 9, to re-group and would be back at it on Tuesday.
Among the missing were pre-entries Chuck Hossfeld and Ed Flemke Jr. After
three nights Eric Beers led the modified point standings. Beers, with 330
points, held a four-point lead over defending series champion Ted
Christopher. Donnie Lia was third, eight points behind with Charlie
Pasteryak and George Kent rounding out the top five. In other matters,
Preston Connecticut car owner Art Barry announced that he would field a
two-car team on the NASCAR Featherlite Modified Tour Series for 2004. Barry,
who owns and operates Spearpoint Auto in Preston, CT announced that his son
Kenny and 2003 NEMA Rookie of the Year Sean Caisse will comprise a two car
team and run the entire series.
Bob Bahre, owner and promoter of the New Hampshire International Speedway
in Loudon, New Hampshire who was seriously injured in an automobile accident
when his SUV went off the road in Brownfield Maine and struck a tree was
listed in stable condition at the Maine Medical Center in Portland. In
addition to bruises and cuts Bahre, 71, suffered a cracked vertebra.
Five years ago in 2009, after a long
snowy winter in the northeast many race fans and competitors packed their
bags and headed to Florida for the annual Speedweeks. The New Smyrna
Speedway World Series of Auto Racing began on Friday night. Temperatures
were in the 50’s most of the day but once the sun went down it got quite
chilly. When the Modifieds took the green for their feature at 20 minutes to
11 it was 30 degrees.
Jimmy Blewett was the opening night Modified winner of what ended up
being a rolling 25 lap demolition derby. Starting in ninth spot, Blewett
took the lead after a lap 17 confrontation with Matt Hirschman. Hirschman
and Blewett were racing quite hard for the lead when they came together on
the backstretch. Hirschman rode the backstretch wall into turn three and
suffered significant damage to his car which had to be double hooked off the
track. Race Director Richard Brooks felt the incident was the result of hard
racing and took no action against Blewett. He did, however take action
against Ted Christopher following an incident on lap 21. Christopher dove
under Jon McKennedy going into turn four. McKennedy hit turn four wall a
ton. Christopher was penalized and sent to the back of the pack for over
aggression on the track. After almost an hour the checkered flag flew on lap
25. Blewett won and was followed by Chuck Hossfeld, JR Bertuccio, Bobby
Grigas, Eric Goodale and Christopher.
Because of the lateness of the hour, 12:30am, officials shortened the SK
type feature to 15 laps. Jimmy Blewett went pole to pole to record his
second feature win of the night. Grigas and Kenny Horton followed.
Matt Hirschman and his crew completely rebuilt their damaged racer,
finishing it just in time for night #2 at New Smyrna. Their efforts paid off
as Hirschman put his car in victory lane after going pole to pole in the 25
lap Tour type Modified feature. Opening night winner Jimmy Blewett lost
control of his mount on the first lap and hit the wall. With minimal damage
Blewett restarted in the rear of the 22 car field and was able to salvage a
ninth place finish. Ted Christopher ended up in second spot after trading
positions with Chuck Hossfeld with eight laps to go. Hossfeld settled for
third and was followed by Kevin Goodale, Jon McKennedy and Bob Grigas. The
Modified feature was completed shortly after 8:00pm, a sharp improvement
from the opening night. Temperatures were a little more tolerable as the
thermometer stayed around the 50 degree mark.
Jimmy Blewett went from an eight starting spot to take the lead in the
third lap as he cleaned house for the second night in a row in SK type
Modified competition. Bob Grigas finished second with Kenny Horton, third.
The Tour type and SK type Modifieds did not race on Sunday night.
One of the big issues so far at the Florida Speedweeks had been the fans,
or the lack of them to be exact. The economy of this country was not good
and many people had been laid off from their jobs. The Busch Clash saw a lot
of empty seats at the Daytona International Speedway. During Sunday’s
Daytona 500 qualifying the grandstands were virtually empty. In past years
these events drew considerably better crowds.
Among the rumors circulating at New Smyrna was that quite possibly
Modified competitors who race at the same tracks on the same weekends as the
NASCAR Cup cars may be forced to shod their cars with Goodyear rubber.
According to reports, Goodyear is working on a wider tire for the Cup cars
in order to put a little more excitement back in the division. It’s not fair
to Hoosier Tire which has stepped up to supply the Modifieds and have never
had a major problem with their tires. If in fact NASCAR mandates this it
will only apply to events scheduled for Loudon and Bristol. In the past Cup
competitors have wined that Modified rubber has messed up their set-ups.
The Waterford Speedbowl property was still scheduled to be foreclosed on
by mortgage holder Rocco Arbitell on March 2. Despite all that, property
owner Terry Eames continued to make plans for the upcoming season. With
Arbitell foreclosing on the track things would be slightly different then if
a bank were to foreclose on a property. A bank would accept the highest bid
no matter what their future plans were. Arbitell does not have to accept any
bids he just legally has to advertise an auction and hold it. He could
refuse any amount of money which in turn would ultimately give him ownership
and control of the facility.
It appeared that former track operator Jerry Robinson could be setting
himself up for future problems with the Internal Revenue Service as he had
not complied with federal law in sending out accurate 1099's to competitors.
The law says that all tax forms are supposed to be postmarked by Feb. 2
(technically Jan. 31st, but since that was a Saturday, it was Feb. 2). In
the case of 1099’s, if the amount indicated includes money that was never
paid they are bogus. If Mr. Robinson failed to provide the necessary
accurate forms he could end up paying a hefty fine to the IRS and could find
himself in jail!
An insider in the know at NASCAR had hinted that the Waterford Speedbowl
may not get a sanction unless the purse is paid from the 2008 Fall Finale.
NASCAR was founded by Bill France Sr to protect competitors from promoters
who ran off with gate receipts when they should have paid competitors.
Evidently it doesn’t make any difference who would be running the track in
2009. The competitors needed to be paid before the NASCAR banner goes up!
Needless to say competitors were never paid and never will be paid. Robinson
is deceased.
Despite all the uncertainty the Waterford Speedbowl released its 2009
schedule with more than 50 events planned.
Kevin Harvick powered past Jamie McMurray on the outside of the last lap
Saturday night to grab a come-from-nowhere victory in the Budweiser
Shootout. It was Harvick's first victory in 71 races, dating to the All-Star
race in May 2007. The only other event he won that year was the
season-opening 500, when he nipped Mark Martin in a photo finish. Harvick
was winless in 2008. Harvick started 23rd in the Shootout, spent most of the
race in the back dodging wrecks, then slowly worked his way up toward the
front. McMurray seemed headed for the win until a late wreck between Greg
Biffle and David Stremme set up a two-lap overtime sprint to the finish.
Harvick was in fourth on the restart, and didn't seem to have anything for
McMurray. But as they closed in on the finish line, he used a huge push from
Denny Hamlin to slide past McMurray on the outside. Harvick raced to the win
as Hamlin, Jimmie Johnson and Kyle Busch all crashed behind him.
Martin Truex Jr won the pole for the season-opening Daytona 500, while
Mark Martin qualified second. Truex and Martin locked in their spots during
Sunday's qualifying at Daytona International Speedway. Only the top two
spots were secured under the complicated qualifying process for the Feb. 15
race, and the rest of the field would be set by a pair of 150-mile races
Thursday. Truex earned the pole by turning a lap at 188.001 mph in a
Chevrolet for Earnhardt Ganassi Racing. The team is a merged effort of Dale
Earnhardt Inc. and Chip Ganassi Racing, organizations that joined up in late
November when sponsorship difficulties threatened their race teams. Martin,
meanwhile, turned a lap at 187.817 in a Chevrolet for Hendrick Motorsports.
The 50-year-old veteran is returning to full-time racing after running a
partial schedule the previous two years.
Last year, 2013, The World Series
officially opened on Friday night for round one of the six night Modified
portion of the series. NASCAR Race Director/Chief Steward Ricky Brooks
confiscated three carburetors when modified cars went through tech. He
agreed to give them back at the end of the series. The issue was a butterfly
valve. Ted Christopher, Matt Hirschman and Earl Paules are the drivers that
has their carbs confiscated. Twelve cars went to post for the opening night
35 lapper. Woody Pitkat and Hillbilly Racing served notice that they intend
to go for the series title. Pitkat started third and took the lead from
Patrick Emerling after a lap six restart. Pitkat never looked back and the
Hill family mount never faltered as he went on to record the win. Emerling
finished second with Matt Hirschman, Chuck Hossfeld and Earl Paules rounding
out the top five. Sixth through eighth was Mike Stefanik, Eric Goodale and
Ted Christopher.
Night No. 2, Saturday 2/16, saw 11 cars go to post for the 35 lap
Modified feature at New Smyrna. On the start, pole sitter JR Bertuccio
attempted to pinch Woody Pitkat but to no avail as Pitkat took the lead.
Bertuccio bumped his way past Pitkat on lap five to take the lead but not
for long as Chuck Hossfeld was on a mission. Hossfeld, who started fifth,
moved into the lead on lap six. Bertuccio tried in vain to regain the top
spot but eventually faded, giving way to Matt Hirschman and Pitkat. Ted
Christopher came alive midway in the event but that effort was short lived
as he too, faded, because of loss of power. In the final ten laps Hossfeld
and Hirschman ran side by side with Hossfeld coming out on top at the
finish. Hirschman finished a strong second with Patrick Emerling, third.
Pitkat and Christopher rounded out the top five.
The Modifieds took Sunday, Monday and Tuesday night off from New Smyrna
in order to concentrate on the First Annual Battle at the Beach at the
Daytona International Speedway.
In NASCAR Sprint Cup racing Kevin Harvick won the debut race of NASCAR's
new Generation-6 car. Harvick dominated Saturday night's exhibition Sprint
Unlimited, winning the kickoff to Speedweeks at Daytona International
Speedway for the third time in five years. But no one has a firm grasp on
what the season-opening Daytona 500 will look like in NASCAR's brand new
car. The non-points race only had 19 cars at the start, and the field was
whittled down to 12 after an early accident.
Harvick threw a block on Biffle and Tony Stewart, Joey Logano couldn't
get to the leaders and Matt Kenseth, who might have had the strongest car,
faded late as Harvick rolled to the win. He led 40 of the 75 laps.
But several big names were knocked out a mere 15 laps into the race.
Stewart was running second when he cut across the front of Marcos Ambrose,
making slight contact that turned Stewart sideways and required a save to
keep from crashing. Traffic stacked up behind him, triggering a
chain-reaction, nine-car crash that wiped out seven cars. Taken out were
defending race winner Kyle Busch and Denny Hamlin from Joe Gibbs Racing,
Jeff Gordon and Jimmie Johnson from Hendrick Motorsports, Mark Martin and
Kurt Busch.
Greg Biffle finished second and Logano was third in his Penske Racing
debut. Stewart was fourth and Kenseth fifth in his Joe Gibbs Racing debut.
In Daytona 500 qualifying, Danica Patrick made NASCAR history, becoming
the first female driver to win a pole at NASCAR’s top level – the NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series. During qualifying for the sport’s marquee event, Patrick
turned a lap of 196.434 mph (45.817 seconds), giving her the first starting
position for the Daytona 500. It was the fastest Daytona 500 pole-winning
speed since 1990.
Forty five cars attempted to qualify.
That’s about it for this week from 11 Gardner Drive, Westerly, and
R.I.02891. Ring my chimes at 401-596-5467. E-mail:
smithpe_97_97@yahoo.com.
Phil Smith has been a
columnist for Speedway Scene and various
other publications for over 3 decades.
Looking Back Archive
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Source: Phil
Smith / Looking Back A Bit
Posted: February
14, 2014 |
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