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2/7/08, 1:19 PM |
#1
When I was 17, It was a Very Good Year
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Member
Join Date: Jul 2007 Posts: 169 |
The following is a story from Car & Driver Magazine. I sat high in the grandstand that night and remember it like it was yesterday.
I hope D.O. will enjoy it ![]() Night Race (1965 Reading PA) "Scratch" Daniels was from St. Paul, Minnesota and he had just come up to the United States Auto Club from the International Motor Contest Association, known simply as "IMCA"-- the oldest and roughest sprint car circuit in the country. Tough guys like Dutch Schrader and Frank Luptow and Pete Folse and Buzz Barton had given the IMCA a reputation for slam-bang race driving that meant something on every track from Sioux City to Winchester. It was against strong men like Folse and Barton and their four-by-four Chevys and their Ranger aircraft engines that "Scratch" Daniels had learned his lessons and now it was time to take on the hotshots in USAC. The crowd responded before Daniels was ten feet into the first turn and a great moan of expectation passed through them. "Woweee, he's running high!" somebody shouted. Daniels was out near the fence, "on the marbles," as they say, and his Chevy engine was sending volleys of raw noise ricocheting into the enclosure of the grandstand. He'd rejected the low groove--the one that took the earlier qualifiers over the deep ruts near the inside rail--and had chosen to run high on the rim in a wide, spectacular arc through the narrow turns. His car was cocked in a vicious power slide as he entered the main straight and a barrage of cheers escorted him past the grandstands. He lifted his foot a split second before he entered the first turn and his engine went BLAM! in a massive, resonant backfire and two globes of red flame the size of basketballs spewed out of his exhaust pipes. He was streaking down the back straight when they announced his time, "twenty-four and seventy-eight one-hundredths seconds." Two seconds faster than anybody else and the crowd broke into cheering as he came by again. They were with him, hollering and yelling and stomping their feet for ol' Scratch Daniels to manhandle that bucking mean mother of a Chevrolet around those ruts and on to an even quicker time. Give her hell, Daniels, GO, GO, GO! He went, he did, though not quite as fast as the first lap, and when he steered his car out of the light and into the darkened pits, they all clapped. They clapped because they had seen a man with guts put on a brilliant display of driving, and that's what they had paid to see. Then a few others went faster, including a smart kid from Kansas City named Greg Weld and canny old Jud Larson in A.J. Watson's own Offy and Daniel's team mate Jerry Richert, who runs out of Forest Lake, Minnesota. But the crowd remembered "Scratch" Daniels, because he had been the first man to ride the rim, and they knew enough about this sport to realize that each successive man to use that groove would find it smoother. "And now, ladies and gentlemen, here he is, the National driving Champion, Aaaay Jaaay Foyt!" An unnumbered white sprinter burst out of the pits and roared through the first and second turns. It was Foyt, alright, sitting in that familiar erect position with his head thrown back, and part of the crowd stood up. It was his first sprint car race since a nasty stock car accident, and some people had said that his friends and his family had convinced him to stay away from the sprinters because they were too dangerous. But there he was, on this chill night in Pennsylvania, out to show those Dutchmen and the smart guys from the IMCA and the newcomers like Andretti and Stapp that he was still the toughest guy on the block. He wasn't necessarily their favorite, they didn't love him like they loved some of the others, but they knew he was the best--maybe the best they would ever see in their lifetimes--and for the singular reason of witnessing a great champion do something extraordinary, they wanted to see A.J. Foyt break his own track record. What a comeback! But it never happened, because Foyt's car was sick with an illness that wouldn't be cured until another day and his role in the evening's action was a minor one. "Move back the fences!" somebody yelled when Mario Andretti began his run. He was a little Italian from nearby Nazareth that everyone considered to be one of the brightest driving prospects anywhere, but the Reading crowd was skeptical. A few weeks earlier, in another sprint show, Andretti had encountered awesome handling problems with his new car and spun several times before he brushed the retaining wall in front of the grandstand and quit in disgust. They knew he had guts and they knew he had the ability to make the big time, but maybe they didn't like to see it come too fast and too easy for him, and nobody seemed to sad when he clocked a rather mediocre time. They were hawking popcorn and peanuts but, sorry , no beer in the stand when the first eight-lap heat started. Five cars were going to run. Richert and Daniels were in the two blue and white sister cars at the rear. For the first time in many years, USAC was trying the inverted start system in the heats, whereby the fastest cars are placed at the back of the pack. They swooped past Fonoro, who unleashed a green flag at the last moment, and they barreled into the first turn. Five cars took five different lines, with Daniels up near the rail and Richert squeezing by the slowpokes on the inside. They hit the back chute together, locked in a dog-eat-dog battle for the lead. Past the stands and Daniels struggled a few feet ahead of Richert. Forget about busting the cars, forget about breaking your head, forget about the lousy forty bucks for winning the heat, just go, baby. Money or common sense or retirement in Fort Lauderdale--to hell with all that. Richert and Daniels were racing, hanging it out on a bumpy dirt track in Reading, Pennsylvania for nothing more than the raw satisfaction of winning--winning-- because that's what race drivers are supposed to do. Daniels has his teammate by fifteen feet when a straggler spun on the fourth turn. They ran a lap under the yellow flag while they cleared the track and then headed for Fonoro's furled green flag in Indian file. "Go!" the crowd yelled, and the two drivers accelerated toward the wavering banner. Richert got the jump and slanted inside the wide sweeping Daniels as they raced into the first turn. A massive cheer went up as the two drivers powered onto the back chute nose-to-nose, with savage licks of flames trailing them through the night. Through the third and fourth turns, and Richert led by a yard. Sliding onto the front straight, Richert added another three yards. The frantic voice on the loudspeaker was smothered by the scream of the Chevy engines as they rushed past the stands and into the next-to-last lap. Every man, woman and child in the grandstands was up and shouting. Daniels pulled even and stuck the low snout of his car inside as they slewed sideways into the third turn. He had Richert and there wasn't anyway of stopping him. He took the white *** with a few feet to spare and then stayed a little low to shut the door on Richert, who might try to sneak by on the inside again. Twenty more seconds of keeping the car pointed right--twenty more seconds of controlling a racing car with a significantly better power-to-weight ratio than a Grand Prix car or even an Indianapolis car--and he was home the winner. And they clapped, and they kept on clapping until old Richert and Daniels were back in the pits and the engines were turned off and they were sure that those two tough guys from Minnesota could hear that they liked their style in Reading. This was a crowd that was doing more than watching an automobile race. they were deeply involved, ready to hail the good guys and hoot at the officials. Kill the Umpire!--the crowd was the same kind of friendly enemy that you can find in baseball parks and football stadiums. Visiting Europeans or sports car buffs have difficulty understanding an automobile racing crowd like this; some even refuse to believe such gatherings even exist, because they're used to seeing spectators spread around massive road circuits in isolated, often bored little enclaves. Not so at Reading, where they watch and they listen and they cheer and they boo. They see good races that stink, but they come back, because this is their racing and they know it. Foyt ran in the second heat and when he couldn't get by a lucky midget driver named Bob Tattersall driving an ancient old rail job, everybody knew that no A.J. Foyt flourishes would be forthcoming on this night. Don Branson, who is 44 years old and has a grandchild in Illinois, won the third heat and Andretti won the 10-lap consolation event, which gave the slow guys their last chance to make the 30-lap feature. All the ladies got up and went to the washroom underneath the stands, and the kids trailed up and down the concrete steps with bags of popcorn and boiled hot dogs stuffed in stale buns, while they rolled the 14 fastest cars out on the track for the feature. Richert and been the top qualifier and it was his Chevy that sat on the pole. Beside him was Greg weld in another Chevy, while Daniels and Larson were in the second row. It was a strong field, sprinkled with some big names like Bobby Unser and local favorite Red Reigel, whom the announcer kept calling the "Lee-sport Tornado." The cars were rolled out on the dusky straightaway and they sat there, untended, mud-spattered, while their drivers dressed for battle. They wrapped red workmen's bandanna around their mouths to protect against dust and flying dirt. Some of them wrapped their right forearms in cardboard to fend off flying stones and chunks of dirt. Almost to a man they were wearing white coveralls with stripes of assorted sizes and colors lining their arms. A few of their helmets were plain white, but most of them were striped in garish colors that glinted in the harsh light of the open lamps. They tucked themselves down into their heavily-padded leather seats and tugged their shoulder harness in place. On went the driving gloves and the goggles and they sat there for a moment, inert and helpless, while pickup trucks were maneuvered into place for the push starts. The feature race is the last event of the evening, the climax, and it always finds the crowd ready to treat it like the most important race that has ever been run. They'd been sitting there for two hours, carefully recording the qualifying times and the heat results in their programs. By now they knew who could win, and when themiles of Pennsylvania. they remember men like Ted Horn and Bob Sall and Doc MacKenzie in Reading, Pennsylvania like they remember Babe Herman and Danny Vance in Brooklyn. A paunchy man in his middle-fifties, with a lantern jaw poking out from under a gauche old wide-brim felt hat, walked across the track and a ripple of applause and shouts of greeting passed through the crowd. "Hey Tommy!" somebody called, and another voice said, "that's Tommy Hinnershitz." The Flying Dutchman, they called him. This man was maybe the best sprint car driver ever. He had his cracks at Indianapolis and in the big cars, but it was on the dirt, stuffed bolt-upright into the cockpit of an Offenhauser sprint car, that Tommy Hinnershitz was a race car driver like you'd never forget. They still talk about how he'd **** those noisy mothers sideways smack in the middle of the straightaways and powerslide high and wide through the corners with his rear wheels bombarding the board fences with big, moist clots of clay. These people 14 sprint cars got pushed off for the start, there was tension like the morning when John Glenn climbed aboard Friendship Seven. Greg Weld is learning his lessons well. He stormed out of Kansas City in the super-modified and now he is up among the best in the USAC sprint cars. He won his first feature race on that night at Reading, and he had to overcome some powerful competition to do it. First Jud Larson took his lead away from him, but the kid refused to be shoved aside by the tough Swede who ranked second in USAC sprint cars last season, and he promptly repassed. A yellow flag and a re-start produced a new challenger for the kid's lead. Bobby Unser had found the groove at mid-race and ruthlessly, methodically picked off Daniels, Richert, Branson and Larson. He closed in on Weld, got near enough to ride in his rooster tail of dust, but couldn't get closer. The crowd had kept track of his charge for the lead and each lap brought him more support. Nobody really wanted Weld to lose, nor for that matter was anybody terribly concerned about Unser's winning. Both drivers were relatively new faces from the west and enjoyed none of the loyalty reserved for home-towners. It's just that if Unser could only close in another few feet, just a few lousy feet--then there'd be another fight for the lead. Guys racing. Weld won and he stopped in front of the stands. a couple of flashbulbs pierced the night and then the crowd poured out of their seats and smothered his car. They kept on coming and when they'd surrounded him five deep they peeled off and headed for the pit area where the other cars were being loaded on trailers. It had been a good night for racing. The cars, as usual, had been fast and noisy and the competition had been tight. And thankfully nobody had been hurt. The crowd was tired and ready to go home. they'd come back when the sprint cars returned, but until then every male present would somehow share the lament of the ten-year-old boy who said as he left the now-dark grandstands, "The drivers are the luckiest; they get to drive in the races and watch them too. Copyright |
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2/7/08, 1:26 PM |
#2
Re: When I was 17. it was a Very Good Year
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2007 Posts: 4,728 |
That's a great story and a great song, Al. Thanks for sharing.
Jerry
__________________
A man is about as big as the things that make him angry.
Winston Churchill |
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2/7/08, 1:32 PM |
#3
Re: When I was 17. it was a Very Good Year
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2007 Posts: 1,233 |
Great story, Al. Thanks for sharing and Welcome back! Please stop by more often!
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2/7/08, 1:34 PM |
#4
Re: When I was 17, It was a Very Good Year
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Member
Join Date: Jul 2007 Posts: 169 |
I may be wrong, but I believe the title of the story "Night Race" was used because this was the very first USAC sprint race that was held under the lights. Previously, all USAC shows were day races.
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2/7/08, 2:33 PM |
#5
Re: When I was 17, It was a Very Good Year
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Senior Member
Race Count Last Year: 26 Join Date: Jul 2007 Posts: 1,139 |
Great story. Do you know who wrote it?
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2/7/08, 3:00 PM |
#6
Re: When I was 17, It was a Very Good Year
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Member
Join Date: Jul 2007 Posts: 169 |
I don't know who wrote it. It was on the Car & Driver website a long time ago and I saved the Acrobat file, but there is no name on it. The web address is also a dead end now.
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2/7/08, 3:00 PM |
#7
Re: When I was 17. it was a Very Good Year
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2007 Posts: 243 |
Great Song Great article..... Wish I was around back then I was born in '65. But the Stories are always great to read.
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2/7/08, 5:38 PM |
#8
Re: When I was 17. it was a Very Good Year
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Member
Join Date: Jul 2007 Posts: 169 |
Scratch Daniels
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