¿ªÔÆÌåÓý


Dick Wallen sprint car videos on YouTube

 

Below is a link to one of Dick Wallen's videos, this one on sprint car racing up through the 1963 season (it is his volume 1; apparently there is a volume 2).

Some of the highlights:
  • It includes some good color on USAC, CRA and IMCA events.
  • There are all of the notable sprint cars from the era:? The Konstant Hot (which Foyt drove for a while); Bobby Marvin running a roadster on dirt;? Foyt in Watson's Blue No. 9: Foyt in his own sprint car at DuQuoin; Fike Plumbing and Hurtubise's?No. 56.
  • Some of the races include the late Steve Stapp running?with the leaders.
  • IMCA ran 52 events in 1963.? Check out the fair at St. Paul, MN.? There were 50 drivers entered for two days of racing, including Jud Larson on a comeback.? And check out the size of the crowd in the stands.
  • The flagmen?of the era were in my opinion just a little bit crazy.? You will see them on almost all the tracks standing halfway across the main straight?waving their flags as the winner -- or the field -- comes roaring by.
This is a good video.
Enjoy

Bill Blaylock



--

Bill Blaylock

Sanbornville NH USA


OT ... (more or less) Troy Indy Special at auction

 

Check out this listing.? A really neat looking custom, Indy roadster looking car.? ?Current bidding when I posted this was $90K.? Kinda looks like one of the old Pat Clancy Bardahl roadsters, doesn't it.


Enjoy

Bill Blaylock

--

Bill Blaylock

Sanbornville NH USA


Re: Parnelli Jones dead at age 90 years

 

Thanks, Jim. Old PJ was something else, just a helluva driver. I can imagine he intimidated a LOT of other drivers. It was just fun to watch him...talk about competitive!

Bill Barker
Fort Leavenworth, KS
On Tuesday, June 11, 2024 at 02:13:21 PM CDT, Jim Thurman <jim.thurman@...> wrote:


Bill,

The race where Parnelli's pole was disallowed was also at Riverside, but in the 1970 Motor Trend 500 NASCAR race. Parnelli (and seven other Western drivers) qualified on Firestones. NASCAR ruled them ineligible as the tires weren't available in enough quantity for the entire field and disallowed the times. Parnelli strongly objected and brought truckloads to the track overnight, but NASCAR would not relent and moved Parnelli and the other Western drivers to the back of the field. Parnelli considered not running, but decided to go ahead. He started 35th. He stormed through the field (in his book, Western NASCAR star Jack McCoy, who started right behind Parnelli, said he saw him make moves he couldn't believe, adding that he tried to stay with him, but only could for so long). On lap 35, Parnelli took the lead. Coming off turn 9, in the lead for the first time, in front of the main grandstand, Parnelli stuck his arm out the window and lofted a single digit towards the press box, where one Bill France was watching. The crowd absolutely erupted. In their race report, Autoweek waggishly remarked that Parnelli let the crowd know exactly what position he was in. Unfortunately, Parnelli's transmission packed it in and he was a DNF.

The Trans-Am race, later that year at Riverside, had Jones fall well back after an on-track collision and resulting pit stop. He stormed back through the field to win that too!
--
Jim Thurman
Lancaster CA USA

--
Bill Barker
Fort Leavenworth KS USA


Re: Parnelli Jones dead at age 90 years

 

Bill,

The race where Parnelli's pole was disallowed was also at Riverside, but in the 1970 Motor Trend 500 NASCAR race. Parnelli (and seven other Western drivers) qualified on Firestones. NASCAR ruled them ineligible as the tires weren't available in enough quantity for the entire field and disallowed the times. Parnelli strongly objected and brought truckloads to the track overnight, but NASCAR would not relent and moved Parnelli and the other Western drivers to the back of the field. Parnelli considered not running, but decided to go ahead. He started 35th. He stormed through the field (in his book, Western NASCAR star Jack McCoy, who started right behind Parnelli, said he saw him make moves he couldn't believe, adding that he tried to stay with him, but only could for so long). On lap 35, Parnelli took the lead. Coming off turn 9, in the lead for the first time, in front of the main grandstand, Parnelli stuck his arm out the window and lofted a single digit towards the press box, where one Bill France was watching. The crowd absolutely erupted. In their race report, Autoweek waggishly remarked that Parnelli let the crowd know exactly what position he was in. Unfortunately, Parnelli's transmission packed it in and he was a DNF.

The Trans-Am race, later that year at Riverside, had Jones fall well back after an on-track collision and resulting pit stop. He stormed back through the field to win that too!
--
Jim Thurman
Lancaster CA USA


Robin Miller's video on Parnelli

 

If you have not seen it, check out the late Robin Miller's 4 minute video on Parnelli Jones.



Bill Blaylock

--

Bill Blaylock

Sanbornville NH USA


Re: Parnelli Jones dead at age 90 years

 

Thomas,

Thanks for letting us know the sad news. My fondest memory of PJ was an article in Sports Car Graphic where he had run a Mustang in the '70 Trans-Am race at Riverside. If I remember correctly he had qualified on the pole only for the officials to disqualify that time as his tires were illegal or some such thing. He started from the back of the pack and in not too many laps was leading. A great picture showed PJ in a hard right turn with (I think) the right rear tire slightly in the air and the right side of the car bashed in. I don't remember if he won but he sure as hell let them know who was boss.

The best thing about that report was the caption..."When PJ charges, women faint and strong men shudder!"

How can you not like and appreciate a driver like that? No wonder he had so much success. We are of an age where are heroes are passing on nearly every day. But, that's life and we're better for having seen drivers like PJ and great races through the years.

Bill Barker
Fort Leavenworth, KS
On Tuesday, June 4, 2024 at 08:50:54 PM CDT, Thomas Luce via groups.io <toml242001@...> wrote:


Parnelli Jones, 90, winner of the 1963 Indy 500 as a driver and in 1970 and 1971 as a owner, has died on June 4th.
--
Thomas Luce
Manhattan Beach CA USA

--
Bill Barker
Fort Leavenworth KS USA


Re: Parnelli Jones dead at age 90 years

 

Thomas, what a neat photo of a young Parnelli Jones.? ?Thanks for posting it.

Bill Blaylock

On Tue, Jun 4, 2024 at 10:12?PM Thomas Luce via <toml242001=[email protected]> wrote:
Thanks for the memories Parnelli.

--
Thomas Luce
Manhattan Beach CA USA


--

Bill Blaylock

Sanbornville NH USA


Re: Parnelli Jones dead at age 90 years

 

Thanks for the memories Parnelli.

--
Thomas Luce
Manhattan Beach CA USA


Parnelli Jones dead at age 90 years

 

Parnelli Jones, 90, winner of the 1963 Indy 500 as a driver and in 1970 and 1971 as a owner, has died on June 4th.
--
Thomas Luce
Manhattan Beach CA USA


Tom Malloy's 1981 winner

 

Here is last week's edition of "My Ride" by A.J. Baime.? It was published in the weekend WSJ the day before the 500.? ?It is an enjoyable narration on Tom Malloy, his collection and his Penske PC9B, the car that won (eventually) the 1981 500.? I know many of you on RH have seen Malloy's collection.? I have not, but maybe someday?....

Bill Blaylock
Sanbornville, NH

The 1981 Indy 500 Ended in a Dispute That Still Gets People Revved Up. He Owns the Winning Car.

Tom Malloy¡¯s racing collection includes the three top-finishing cars from the race, including the Penske PC9B driven by Bobby Unser

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A centerpiece of Tom Malloy¡¯s racing collection is the Penske PC9B driven by Bobby Unser in the 1981 Indianapolis 500.
May 26, 2024 5:30 am ET
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Tom Malloy, 85, a construction equipment company founder who lives in Villa Park, Calif., on his 1981 Penske PC9B Indianapolis 500 winner, as told to A.J. Baime.

When I was a sophomore in high school, my father sponsored a car that qualified for the 1954 Indianapolis 500. People knew my father, Emmett J. Malloy,? because he owned the Carrell Speedway in Gardena, Calif. Because I was so into his cars, he took me to Indianapolis, and I got to watch his car run in 1954. It was called the Malloy Special, driven by Jimmy Reece.?

This car qualified for the Indianapolis 500 with speeds over 200 mph.

Every Memorial Day weekend, the best drivers compete in the 500-mile race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Seeing it in 1954 changed my life.

I got away from racing when my wife and I started a family. But as things got better and my business grew, people who knew my history wanted to know if I would help sponsor their Indy cars. Before long, I was fully engulfed in racing.

Over many years, I acquired a collection of cars¡ªall types, but many of them having to do with Indianapolis. I tried to find my father¡¯s 1954 Indy 500 car but never could. I did find the engine and was able to put that in my collection.

Malloy first saw the Indianapolis 500 when his father sponsored a car in the race. ¡®Seeing it in 1954 changed my life,¡¯ he says.

My father never allowed me to race because it was such a deadly sport in the 1950s. [Jimmy Reece, the driver of the Malloy Special at Indy in 1954, died in a racing crash four years later.] My father died young from cancer, and, about 25 years after he passed away, I did a three-day driving school at Sears Point, now called Sonoma Raceway. It was everything I imagined. I started racing vintage cars, and for the next 20 years, I raced all over the world, including France, England, Australia, New Zealand and all over the U.S. I won a lot of races and made a lot of friends.

I had to stop after I had a heart attack while competing at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, Calif. Even though I was having a heart attack in the car, I finished that race and won my class, placing third overall.

Malloy has raced cars all over the world.

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About 20 years ago, I asked myself, ¡°Tom, if you think you are going to build this collection of Indianapolis cars, don¡¯t you think you should have one winner?¡± Indy 500-winning cars are hard to find and very expensive. Lo and behold, a winning car was coming up for auction in Arizona. But not just any winner¡ªthe winning car from 1981. That year saw the most disputed Indy 500 ever; I was there and saw it myself. I drove to Arizona to bid on this car, and when the hammer dropped, I was the owner.

Malloy owns the first, second and third finishing cars from the 1981 Indy 500, but the actual winner is still controversial.

The story of why the Indy 500 was so disputed in 1981 is important. Bobby Unser took the checkered flag at the end of the race, but when people?, you could see that, after Unser had come in for a final pit stop, he apparently passed some cars before he fell back in line, even though the pace car was out at the time. You¡¯re not supposed to do that. [On the broadcast, the announcer says, ¡°What¡¯s he doing? Look at that, he¡¯s passed about half a dozen cars under the yellow [flag]. You can¡¯t do that.¡±] The day after the race, the judges decided to give the win to?Mario Andretti, who had originally finished in second.

Malloy gets some help with the 1981 Penske PC9B.

Now Bobby Unser¡¯s team, owned by?Roger Penske, protested. Two out of a three-judge panel¡ª138 days later¡ªvoted to give the win back to Unser, while fining Unser¡¯s team $40,000 for breaking the rules. Mario Andretti already had the winning ring given to him. He still has that ring to this day.

A few years after I bought the winning car, I acquired the third-place car from 1981, and a few years after that, the second-place car. So now I have all three. When people come to see my collection, I can tell them that I have the 1981 winning car, no matter who they think actually won: Bobby Unser or Mario Andretti.

Malloy in his garage, an expression of a lifetime of motor-racing passion.

--

Bill Blaylock

Sanbornville NH USA


Re: It's Give to Lincoln Day!

 

Better than a political donation; going to something you can believe in.

-----Original Message-----
From: <museumstaff@...>
Sent: May 30, 2024 9:30 AM
To: <bstorck@...>
Subject: It's Give to Lincoln Day!

?

?

? ? ?

?


--
Bob Storck
KC MO USA


Re: F1 racing compared to Indy 500

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Hi,

While I agree with the general thrust of argument, that comparison is cherry picking, and you could pick any Monaco GP from the past 20 years or more and see something similar. Monaco is an outlier track, always has been, and no-one in F1 would even claim it is a good race as such - just look at the driver and owner comments from this year. And if anyone came up with the idea of a track like Monaco these days they would be laughed out of court. Just because it is tradition doesn't mean that it is a great idea.....

If you looked at any other track used this year, you would see something quite different, and if you strip Verstappen out of the equation then based on the criteria in the graphs then we've actually had good racing in F1. But I wouldn't claim that large numbers of overtakes and changes in position necessarily make good racing either, otherwise Formula E would be right up there. That said, the closer racing at the front of IndyCar and the larger pool of potential winners is certainly more compelling, but it would be interesting to see the same graphs done between the road, street, short oval and long oval within IndyCar, and see whether there really is a correlation between interest and overtakes, and whether the interest in races correlates with circuit type.

I'll now duck and run and get back to the 1948 US race season research.....

Cheers,

Darren Galpin

Bristol, UK

On 29/05/2024 14:43, Gene Ingram via groups.io wrote:

Fellow Rhers,
?This year we saw another great 500 at Indy. While we all know that the technology of F1 is the best, that does not mean it's good racing. Here is a graph that tells the difference in technology vs racing.
?Having said that, it's not suggesting that Indy car is not high tech, it certainly?is. I'm not sure of the numbers (someone will jump in here and share that with us) of how many lead changes and by how many drivers.?
?The graph posted will give a good idea of how much 'racing' is happening between the 2 series.
Cheers,
?Gene Ingram
?New castle, In.



--
Gene Ingram
List Owner
New Castle IN USA


Re: F1 racing compared to Indy 500

 

Great thoughts, and good graphics, Gene.

?

Although, I'd contend that it would be better to compare two road courses without weather and more realistic pit stops.

?

A constricted street course vs. a wide open super oval is comparing apples and artichokes!

?

Thank you, Bob Storck in KCMO

-----Original Message-----
From: <[email protected]>
Subject: [RH] F1 racing compared to Indy 500

?

Fellow Rhers,
?This year we saw another great 500 at Indy. While we all know that the technology of F1 is the best, that does not mean it's good racing. Here is a graph that tells the difference in technology vs racing.
?Having said that, it's not suggesting that Indy car is not high tech, it certainly?is. I'm not sure of the numbers (someone will jump in here and share that with us) of how many lead changes and by how many drivers.?
?The graph posted will give a good idea of how much 'racing' is happening between the 2 series.
Cheers,
?Gene Ingram
?New castle, In.

--
Bob Storck
KC MO USA


Re: Bob McCreadie, 73

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Thanks, Bill. I grew up in upstate NY and lived about 10 miles from Fonda Speedway in Fonda, NY. ?Bill Wimble #33 was the Flying Dairy Farmer and my favorite driver. There was also Pete Corey, Lou Lazzaro, Doc Blanchard and others I can't remember right now.?

Bill Barker
Fort Leavenworth,KS

On May 29, 2024, at 09:26, Bill Blaylock <william.blaylock500@...> wrote:

?
Here is an obit on Bob McCreadie that appeared in the N.Y. Times last Thursday.? I was only vaguely familiar with McCreadie, but you will note from the obit that he had quite a fan? following in New York.? I am posting this because it appeared in the Times, which? by reputation has one of the most sophisticated readerships.? I think it is an honor that? the Times has? commemorated McCreadie and paid tribute to his career on the short dirt tracks he ran.

Bill Blaylock
Sanborneville, NH
Bob McCreadie, ¡®the Master of Going Faster,¡¯ Dies at 73

One of the winningest drivers in dirt racing history, he was a folk hero who cursed wildly, drove aggressively and crashed a lot.

Listen to this article?¡¤ 6:12 min?
  • Share full article
A black-and-white photo of a young man who has a large beard and wears a trucker hat. He is squatting in front of a dirt racing car.
Bob McCreadie in 1983. Known as Barefoot Bob, he won more than 500 races in his career. He also occasionally broke his back in spectacular wrecks.Credit...via McCreadie family

May 23, 2024

Bob McCreadie, who was one of the winningest drivers in dirt racing history and was regularly introduced by announcers as ¡°the master of going faster,¡± died on May 15 at his home in Watertown, N.Y. He was 73.

His son Tim, who is also a?, confirmed the death. He said his father had been ill for several months and was in hospice care.

McCreadie won more than 500 races at weekly events and on the touring??circuit, driving dirt-modified stock cars at 150 miles per hour around short, tight-cornered tracks at fairgrounds and speedways along the East Coast. In the course of his 35-year-career, he occasionally broke his back in spectacular wrecks.

ADVERTISEMENT

Dirt racing is not nearly as popular (or as lucrative) as the NASCAR circuit. But to the more than 2,500 fans who typically attend races, the sport is an enduring source of small-town pride and entertainment.

Image
Bob McCreadie¡¯s son Tim, who is also a driver, stood in front of a mural of his father in 2005.Credit...via Watertown Daily Times

McCreadie was dirt racing¡¯s perfect Everyman: Scrawny, bespectacled, with a bushy beard, he chain-smoked, cursed vigorously and hauled his racecars with his own pickup truck instead of the fancy trailers that many of his contemporaries used.

In northern New York, where he lived, the news media covered him with roughly the same exuberance with which New York City newspapers covered Babe Ruth in his heyday. The Post-Standard of Syracuse mentioned him more than 1,200 times in his career.

How The Times decides who gets an obituary.?There is no formula, scoring system or checklist in determining the news value of a life. We investigate, research and ask around before settling on our subjects. If you know of someone who might be a candidate for a Times obituary,?.

¡°He looked like a country bumpkin,¡± Ron Hedger, a longtime writer for?, said in a phone interview. ¡°The fans identified with him, and they really loved him. There was always a mob of people waiting in line for an autograph.¡±

The dirt racing circuit is stocked with characters known by their kooky nicknames: Danimal, A.J. Slideways, the Mad Russian, the Flying Dairy Farmer, Brett the Corporate Jet. McCreadie was Barefoot Bob.

How he got the nickname is a subject of some confusion among his fans. Some pegged it to the time he raced a car with such a narrow cockpit that he had to remove a shoe so his feet would fit. Others pointed to his hardscrabble childhood in upstate New York, where he spent summers shoeless and in trouble.

As a teenager, he hot-wired cars and sped around Watertown with his buddies, an activity that eventually led to a yearlong visit to a juvenile detention center. He passed the time by reading auto magazines and studying car engines. ¡°Best thing that ever happened to me,¡± he??The New York Times in 2003.

He got a job as a mechanic after his release and tinkered with beat-up stock cars. He figured he¡¯d race once or twice. ¡°Then I¡¯d get out,¡± he told The Times. ¡°¡®I thought it would be a passing fancy. I never thought it would be a career.¡±

He started racing in 1971 and won his first race four years later. He then began dominating the circuit. In 1986, he won the Miller American 200 at the New York State Fairgrounds ¡ª the Super Bowl of dirt racing. His best year was 1994, when he won 47 of 93 races.

Image
A fuzzy black-and-white image of two dirt cars racing.
McCreadie, left, in action in 1995. ¡°The fans identified with him, and they really loved him,¡± one observer said. ¡°There was always a mob of people waiting in line for an autograph.¡±Credit...via Watertown Daily Times

ADVERTISEMENT

McCreadie¡¯s experience as a mechanic allowed him to have a Zen-like connection to his cars.

During the 1994 season, he installed a toggle switch on his dashboard that connected to an engine spark plug. As the track surface got slippery toward the end of a race, he would press the button, shorting out a cylinder to gently slow his car around turns. Other drivers would spin out.

¡°Anybody could have thought of that,¡± Mr. Hedger said, ¡°but he was the guy that did.¡±

In his best year, McCreadie won somewhere between $300,000 and $400,000 in race prizes. But his aggressive racing style had an occupational hazard: dozens, perhaps even hundreds, of crashes.

¡°You¡¯re looking at someone who¡¯s run thousands of races,¡± he told The Post-Standard in 2006. ¡°If you tried to do percentage-wise out of the total ¡ª maybe 5 percent.¡±

He broke his back multiple times, including in a spectacular wreck in 1988 when his car flipped over and landed on its roof at Cayuga County Speedway in Weedsport, N.Y.

From his hospital bed after the accident, McCreadie told The Post-Standard: ¡°I must have had my belts loose, because I went into the roof of the car as I went over. But when it came down, I slammed down hard into the seat.¡±

Surrounded by flowers and cards from fans, he took a tranquil view of the incident.

¡°It was no big thing,¡± he said, ¡°just something that happens once in a while in racing that usually doesn¡¯t amount to anything.¡±

Image
McCreadie took part in thousands of races, but his career ended after an S.U.V. hit his motorcycle in 2006.?Credit...via Watertown Daily Times

Robert David McCreadie was born on Jan. 19, 1951, in Watertown. His father, William, was a taxi driver. His mother, Betty (Vincent) McCreadie, was a waitress.

McCreadie often spoke about growing up poor. Racing, he said, was his salvation.

¡°If it wasn¡¯t for auto racing and for my wife, I¡¯d probably be in jail today. Or shot dead by now,¡± he wrote in his autobiography, ¡°Barefoot¡± (2005).

His career ended in 2006 after an accident in a parking lot. A woman crashed her S.U.V. into him as he left his doctor¡¯s office on his Harley-Davidson motorcycle. His injuries included a fractured femur and a chip fracture in his lumbar. A jury later??him more than $1 million in a lawsuit stemming from the incident.

¡°That was a real bad deal,¡± Tim McCreadie said. ¡°He was running OK before that happened. But that was the end.¡±

McCreadie married Sandra Ritton in 1974. In addition to their son Tim, she survives him, as do another son, Jordan; a daughter, Tyne McCreadie; a sister, Kathleen Woodard; a brother, Patrick McCreadie; five grandchildren; and a great-grandson.

Friends and family were never comfortable with McCreadie behind the wheel on paved roads.

¡°To be good at racing,¡± he told The Post-Standard in 2006, ¡°you have to do things a little goofy. You don¡¯t do things quite normally. What to you wouldn¡¯t be nothing at all would scare the pants off other people.¡±

Especially his wife.

¡°I know my wife really gets after me because she¡¯s not comfortable riding with me one bit,¡± he said. ¡°So a lot of times now, I just say, ¡®Here, you drive.¡¯¡±

He added, ¡°I don¡¯t blame her.¡±


--

Bill Blaylock

Sanbornville NH USA


--
Bill Barker
Fort Leavenworth KS USA


Re: F1 racing compared to Indy 500

 

The current one-make Indy cars are so old and out-of-date that they are
eligible for Historic car racing in the HMSA.? That is why I haven't
watched Indy in years.

Lee Stohr

Port Angeles, WA


On 5/29/2024 6:43 AM, Gene Ingram wrote:
Fellow Rhers,
?This year we saw another great 500 at Indy. While we all know that
the technology of F1 is the best, that does not mean it's good racing.
Here is a graph that tells the difference in technology vs racing.
?Having said that, it's not suggesting that Indy car is not high tech,
it certainly?is. I'm not sure of the numbers (someone will jump in
here and share that with us) of how many lead changes and by how many
drivers.
?The graph posted will give a good idea of how much 'racing' is
happening between the 2 series.
Cheers,
?Gene Ingram
?New castle, In.

--
Lee Stohr
Port Angeles WA USA


Re: F1 racing compared to Indy 500

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

While being the most traditional F1 race, Monaco is normally the least exciting due to the constraints of the track. Qualifying was more exciting at Monaco with some surprises, and have Verstappen finishing 6th for a change was good for the sport, but the red flag that removed pitstops from the equation made the Monaco GP atypical. I agree Indy had much more on track passing, and the wide track and length of the race mean that more lead changes will happen. There are also lead changes in NASCAR I believe, but I did not watch one lap of their races so far in 2024.?

This is just my feeling, and I am looking forward to seeing Lewis Hamilton in the Ferrari next year, and hope that Andretti somehow gets an F1 team in the next few years too.

Dave Reese
Macungie PA

americaonwheels.org?-?Allentown's?great transportation museum
flickr.com/photos/brooklands/albums?- Some of my photo albums
tinyurl.com/BrooklandsReese?- My?new slotcar project
tinyurl.com/YTReese?- My?YouTube channel

This Day in Auto History
5.29.1994
John Andretti became the first driver in history to race in both the Indianapolis 500 and the Coca-Cola 600 on the same day. He finished tenth at Indy and thirty-sixth in the Coca-Cola 600 after suffering mechanical failures.

On May 29, 2024, at 9:43?AM, Gene Ingram <geno1966@...> wrote:

Fellow Rhers,
?This year we saw another great 500 at Indy. While we all know that the technology of F1 is the best, that does not mean it's good racing. Here is a graph that tells the difference in technology vs racing.
?Having said that, it's not suggesting that Indy car is not high tech, it certainly?is. I'm not sure of the numbers (someone will jump in here and share that with us) of how many lead changes and by how many drivers.?
?The graph posted will give a good idea of how much 'racing' is happening between the 2 series.
Cheers,
?Gene Ingram
?New castle, In.



--
Gene Ingram
List Owner
New Castle IN USA
<Tale of two races.jpg>


--
Dave Reese
Macungie PA USA


Bob McCreadie, 73

 

Here is an obit on Bob McCreadie that appeared in the N.Y. Times last Thursday.? I was only vaguely familiar with McCreadie, but you will note from the obit that he had quite a fan? following in New York.? I am posting this because it appeared in the Times, which? by reputation has one of the most sophisticated readerships.? I think it is an honor that? the Times has? commemorated McCreadie and paid tribute to his career on the short dirt tracks he ran.

Bill Blaylock
Sanborneville, NH
Bob McCreadie, ¡®the Master of Going Faster,¡¯ Dies at 73

One of the winningest drivers in dirt racing history, he was a folk hero who cursed wildly, drove aggressively and crashed a lot.

Listen to this article?¡¤ 6:12 min?
  • Share full article
A black-and-white photo of a young man who has a large beard and wears a trucker hat. He is squatting in front of a dirt racing car.
Bob McCreadie in 1983. Known as Barefoot Bob, he won more than 500 races in his career. He also occasionally broke his back in spectacular wrecks.Credit...via McCreadie family

May 23, 2024

Bob McCreadie, who was one of the winningest drivers in dirt racing history and was regularly introduced by announcers as ¡°the master of going faster,¡± died on May 15 at his home in Watertown, N.Y. He was 73.

His son Tim, who is also a?, confirmed the death. He said his father had been ill for several months and was in hospice care.

McCreadie won more than 500 races at weekly events and on the touring??circuit, driving dirt-modified stock cars at 150 miles per hour around short, tight-cornered tracks at fairgrounds and speedways along the East Coast. In the course of his 35-year-career, he occasionally broke his back in spectacular wrecks.

ADVERTISEMENT

Dirt racing is not nearly as popular (or as lucrative) as the NASCAR circuit. But to the more than 2,500 fans who typically attend races, the sport is an enduring source of small-town pride and entertainment.

Image
Bob McCreadie¡¯s son Tim, who is also a driver, stood in front of a mural of his father in 2005.Credit...via Watertown Daily Times

McCreadie was dirt racing¡¯s perfect Everyman: Scrawny, bespectacled, with a bushy beard, he chain-smoked, cursed vigorously and hauled his racecars with his own pickup truck instead of the fancy trailers that many of his contemporaries used.

In northern New York, where he lived, the news media covered him with roughly the same exuberance with which New York City newspapers covered Babe Ruth in his heyday. The Post-Standard of Syracuse mentioned him more than 1,200 times in his career.

How The Times decides who gets an obituary.?There is no formula, scoring system or checklist in determining the news value of a life. We investigate, research and ask around before settling on our subjects. If you know of someone who might be a candidate for a Times obituary,?.

¡°He looked like a country bumpkin,¡± Ron Hedger, a longtime writer for?, said in a phone interview. ¡°The fans identified with him, and they really loved him. There was always a mob of people waiting in line for an autograph.¡±

The dirt racing circuit is stocked with characters known by their kooky nicknames: Danimal, A.J. Slideways, the Mad Russian, the Flying Dairy Farmer, Brett the Corporate Jet. McCreadie was Barefoot Bob.

How he got the nickname is a subject of some confusion among his fans. Some pegged it to the time he raced a car with such a narrow cockpit that he had to remove a shoe so his feet would fit. Others pointed to his hardscrabble childhood in upstate New York, where he spent summers shoeless and in trouble.

As a teenager, he hot-wired cars and sped around Watertown with his buddies, an activity that eventually led to a yearlong visit to a juvenile detention center. He passed the time by reading auto magazines and studying car engines. ¡°Best thing that ever happened to me,¡± he??The New York Times in 2003.

He got a job as a mechanic after his release and tinkered with beat-up stock cars. He figured he¡¯d race once or twice. ¡°Then I¡¯d get out,¡± he told The Times. ¡°¡®I thought it would be a passing fancy. I never thought it would be a career.¡±

He started racing in 1971 and won his first race four years later. He then began dominating the circuit. In 1986, he won the Miller American 200 at the New York State Fairgrounds ¡ª the Super Bowl of dirt racing. His best year was 1994, when he won 47 of 93 races.

Image
A fuzzy black-and-white image of two dirt cars racing.
McCreadie, left, in action in 1995. ¡°The fans identified with him, and they really loved him,¡± one observer said. ¡°There was always a mob of people waiting in line for an autograph.¡±Credit...via Watertown Daily Times

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McCreadie¡¯s experience as a mechanic allowed him to have a Zen-like connection to his cars.

During the 1994 season, he installed a toggle switch on his dashboard that connected to an engine spark plug. As the track surface got slippery toward the end of a race, he would press the button, shorting out a cylinder to gently slow his car around turns. Other drivers would spin out.

¡°Anybody could have thought of that,¡± Mr. Hedger said, ¡°but he was the guy that did.¡±

In his best year, McCreadie won somewhere between $300,000 and $400,000 in race prizes. But his aggressive racing style had an occupational hazard: dozens, perhaps even hundreds, of crashes.

¡°You¡¯re looking at someone who¡¯s run thousands of races,¡± he told The Post-Standard in 2006. ¡°If you tried to do percentage-wise out of the total ¡ª maybe 5 percent.¡±

He broke his back multiple times, including in a spectacular wreck in 1988 when his car flipped over and landed on its roof at Cayuga County Speedway in Weedsport, N.Y.

From his hospital bed after the accident, McCreadie told The Post-Standard: ¡°I must have had my belts loose, because I went into the roof of the car as I went over. But when it came down, I slammed down hard into the seat.¡±

Surrounded by flowers and cards from fans, he took a tranquil view of the incident.

¡°It was no big thing,¡± he said, ¡°just something that happens once in a while in racing that usually doesn¡¯t amount to anything.¡±

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McCreadie took part in thousands of races, but his career ended after an S.U.V. hit his motorcycle in 2006.?Credit...via Watertown Daily Times

Robert David McCreadie was born on Jan. 19, 1951, in Watertown. His father, William, was a taxi driver. His mother, Betty (Vincent) McCreadie, was a waitress.

McCreadie often spoke about growing up poor. Racing, he said, was his salvation.

¡°If it wasn¡¯t for auto racing and for my wife, I¡¯d probably be in jail today. Or shot dead by now,¡± he wrote in his autobiography, ¡°Barefoot¡± (2005).

His career ended in 2006 after an accident in a parking lot. A woman crashed her S.U.V. into him as he left his doctor¡¯s office on his Harley-Davidson motorcycle. His injuries included a fractured femur and a chip fracture in his lumbar. A jury later??him more than $1 million in a lawsuit stemming from the incident.

¡°That was a real bad deal,¡± Tim McCreadie said. ¡°He was running OK before that happened. But that was the end.¡±

McCreadie married Sandra Ritton in 1974. In addition to their son Tim, she survives him, as do another son, Jordan; a daughter, Tyne McCreadie; a sister, Kathleen Woodard; a brother, Patrick McCreadie; five grandchildren; and a great-grandson.

Friends and family were never comfortable with McCreadie behind the wheel on paved roads.

¡°To be good at racing,¡± he told The Post-Standard in 2006, ¡°you have to do things a little goofy. You don¡¯t do things quite normally. What to you wouldn¡¯t be nothing at all would scare the pants off other people.¡±

Especially his wife.

¡°I know my wife really gets after me because she¡¯s not comfortable riding with me one bit,¡± he said. ¡°So a lot of times now, I just say, ¡®Here, you drive.¡¯¡±

He added, ¡°I don¡¯t blame her.¡±


--

Bill Blaylock

Sanbornville NH USA


F1 racing compared to Indy 500

 

Fellow Rhers,
?This year we saw another great 500 at Indy. While we all know that the technology of F1 is the best, that does not mean it's good racing. Here is a graph that tells the difference in technology vs racing.
?Having said that, it's not suggesting that Indy car is not high tech, it certainly?is. I'm not sure of the numbers (someone will jump in here and share that with us) of how many lead changes and by how many drivers.?
?The graph posted will give a good idea of how much 'racing' is happening between the 2 series.
Cheers,
?Gene Ingram
?New castle, In.



--
Gene Ingram
List Owner
New Castle IN USA


Re: Does anyone know of a 2024 Indy 500 rebroadcast

 

Thank you Don and Tony,

?

Either my incompetence or YouTube TV's quaint programming display/scheme defeats me. At times, the NTT IndyCar series is absent from their menu selection, and though I've selected "record all" several times this year, I continually get surprised. Apparently I don't subscribe to Peacock ... hadn't missed it.


I did find rebroadcasts via subscription on YouTube videos, but am a cheap SOB.

?

Cheers, Bob Storck in KCMO

-----Original Message-----
From: <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [RH] Does anyone know of a 2024 Indy 500 rebroadcast

?

There are several on youtube.

On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 5:51?AM millerracers2000 via <tonydeseta=[email protected]> wrote:
Peacock has it.
Best Regards,

Tony De Seta
Spring Grove,PA
On 05/28/2024 12:32 AM EDT Bob Storck <bstorck@...> wrote:
?
?

I thought I was recording it, but the quaint and curious aspects of YouTubeTV defeated me. I was involved with watching the recorded Monaco GP, and missed the first 100 laps of Indy. Hoping there's a rebroadcast somewhere.

?

Not quite curious enough to subscribe to one of the rebroadcast recordings.

?

Thank you, Bob Storck in KCMO


--
Bob Storck
KC MO USA

--
Bob Storck
KC MO USA


Re: Does anyone know of a 2024 Indy 500 rebroadcast

 

There are several on youtube.

On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 5:51?AM millerracers2000 via <tonydeseta=[email protected]> wrote:
Peacock has it.
Best Regards,

Tony De Seta
Spring Grove,PA
On 05/28/2024 12:32 AM EDT Bob Storck <bstorck@...> wrote:
?
?

I thought I was recording it, but the quaint and curious aspects of YouTubeTV defeated me. I was involved with watching the recorded Monaco GP, and missed the first 100 laps of Indy. Hoping there's a rebroadcast somewhere.

?

Not quite curious enough to subscribe to one of the rebroadcast recordings.

?

Thank you, Bob Storck in KCMO


--
Bob Storck
KC MO USA


--
Don Stauffer
Coon Rapids MN USA