Fisher79
#11
1/17/09 10:09 PM
Bloomington's been around since the 1920s (I'm thinking 1929??)
The easy answer is IMS hands down, even though I know that answer violates the spirit of the question.
The old Indiana bullrings (Kokomo, Paragon, Bloomington, Lawrenceburg, Haubstadt) have all seen more or less the same cast of great characters throughout their existence; if you pick one, you've basically got to pick them all. If you consider the Fairgrounds, Terre Haute, Salem and Winchester, you're adding a handful of USAC/AAA names that didn't frequent the Indiana quarter miles. Outside of Indiana, you've got to consider Eldora, Manzanita, Ascot and certainly Knoxville. But the guys that ran those places (excluding Eldora) weren't seen in Indiana all that frequently.
That's a long way of saying that I don't think there's one track that can lay claim to that title.
ajb6 (Offline)
#12
1/17/09 10:12 PM
Started racing @ Bloomington in 1923.
A.J. Bowlen
Dirtfan (Offline)
#13
1/17/09 10:23 PM
Originally Posted by ajb6:
Started racing @ Bloomington in 1923.
Good answer! Did Bloomington used to be a 1/2 mile?
Dan Hetser
"Today is a Gift, Tomorrow is not Promised"
Fisher79
#14
1/17/09 10:34 PM
Yes, as did Lawrenceburg (and, for what it's worth, Montpelier.)
bignasty (Offline)
#15
1/17/09 10:38 PM
Back in the day Manzanita or the phoenix fairgrounds also. Any of tracks on the fair circuit back in the day could lay claim to that.
Quarter Midgets- Rio Linda, Pomona, Baylands for west coast.
midgets- Ascot, manzy, winchester, salem, irp, ventura, bakersfield, tulsa...
mac miller (Offline)
#16
1/17/09 11:21 PM
No brainer!....The definitive answer to your question is Dayton/Salem/Winchester. Not only have the greatest of the open wheel racers run at these tracks, but, also, a whole lot of the top stock car drivers have run the "high banks".