This And That
by: Texascudaguy
NASCAR : This And That - The Great History Of Daytona
Jul 28, 2007 | 11:41PM | report this

                             Great Moments In the History of the Daytona 500

            Organized racing on the sandy beaches of Daytona began as far back as 1900. The first timed event was an event sanctioned by the American Automobile Association in 1903. The top speed was 68mph.  Until the early 1930's, it was mainly known as a place where racers would go to attempt world speed records.

       However, as the speeds grew, The 500-feet-wide beach at Daytona was considered too narrow to accommodate the higher speeds,  and the Salt Flats of Utah became the premiere place for racers to attempt these records. Local racers and boot-leggers still used the Daytona Beach road course  as a popular place for unsanctioned races, and showing off their driving skills.

    

This:

 In 1936, the city of Daytona and the AAA hosted it's first stock car event at Daytona Beach . Milt Marion from Long Island, N.Y. won the race in a ’36 Ford. A local Daytona mechanic named Billy France finished 5th in that race.

Big Bill France on the beach at Daytona for the first-ever Stock Car race there in 1936.

       In 1938, the city asked Mr. France to take over the course, because of his knowledge of the history of the area and the speed records set there.

        Stock car( back then "stock" meant stock, as in Granny's ford coupe) racing had little successs in the 40s.    Race promoters would often steal the money before drivers could get paid.   With World War II coming along, France and other racing leaders fought hard to keep racing in Daytona.

That:

     In late 1947, France called together some major players (drivers, mechanics, sponsors, and so on)from the stock car racing scene.

 Together they forged the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) on February 21, 1948.       

     The Series would be known as "Strictly Stock" before being changed to the "Grand National" series in 1950.    In the spring of 1954, NASCAR became the stock car sanctioning body. France went to Daytona’s town leaders and said, “If we want to keep motorsports and the thriving economy that it brings in the Daytona area, a speedway needs to be built.” 

     His main  argument was that the changing ocean tides maid it too difficult and dangerous to race safely in the  cars on the beach course.

     The rest is history—The Daytona International Speedway was built and the Bill France legend had begun.

 

This:

      The inaugural Daytona 500 was run at the Daytona International Speedway in 1959. In that first race, 59 cars started and 30 finished.  Lee Petty won the race in a ’59 Oldsmobile. For three days after the race, they didn’t know if Lee Petty or Johnny Beauchamp was the winner. Officials asked the fans for any photos they had of the finish, and finally 61 hours later, Petty was declared the winner.

 

 

The famous finish.

That:

     Lee's son, Richard Petty,  also drove in that first Daytona 500. Driving a ’57 Oldsmobile, he started in Sixth Place but finished 57th after his engine blew eight laps into the race.  Richard would go on to become the most successful driver American stock car racing has ever seen.                                             
      The "King" of NASCAR,  Richard Petty.                                 

     One of the most famous drmatic moments in NASCAR history ocurred during the 1976 Daytona 500.

This:

    A classic battle between "The King" and David Pearson produced one of the most incredible finishes in auto racing. Both drivers had dominant cars, and stretched a huge lead over the rest of the field with speeds over 190 mph nearing the end of the race.

That: 

      Coming out of turn 4 on the final lap,   Petty had ducked low and passed Pearson but his car slightly drifted up the track and the two drivers touched and crashed. When both cars came to rest in the tri-oval grass, they still had not crossed the start/finish line. Both cars were badly damaged.  Petty's car never started.  Pearson got his car going again and limped across the finish line at 30mph to take the checkered flag,  in the slowest green flag finish in Daytona 500 history.

Video of the famous 1976 Daytona crash:                                            
                                          http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AibV8_0USBA>

 

This:
      The 1979 Daytona 500 was the first 500-mile race to be broadcast live on national television.

That:

     During that race,  another famous final lap crash, and fist fight between leaders Cale Yarborough and Donnie Allison (along with Donnie's brother Bobby Allison) brought national  publicity to NASCAR.

     Earlier in the race, Donnie Allison had lost control of his car sending Yarborough spinning into a muddy infeild, and 4 laps down. Amazingly, through timely pitstops and cautons, Cale got back on the lead lap.  Yarborough made his move on the final lap, diving below Donnie's car in Turn 1. Allison ran Yarborough down to the apron, where the two Oldsmobiles crashed leaving Richard Petty the win after neither car could continue. Bobby stopped to survey the damage, and a helmet-throwing, fists flying throw-down began between the Allisons and Yarborough.

      The fight was more famous than the finish, and it gave the fans an understanding of how real the emotions, and hearts of stock car drivers were.
 Many feel this is the defining moment that lead to what the #2 sport in America  has become today.

Video of the crash and fight:      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MXbHQtZH8dE>

     

     As a 6 year old boy, I met Bobby Allison in Lubbock, Tx,  two months after that wild and wacky 1979 Daytona 500,  and have been a NASCAR fan since that day.  He was in a much nicer mood when i met him, though than that crazy day in Daytona.  

       The sport of NASCAR has many famous moments, and we  fans all have our favorite.   Daytona International Speedway, more often than not, has been the site for most of those moments.  It's storied history and wild finishes are just a few of the things that make it The "World Center of Racing."

    

       I hope you enjoyed reading a little of This and That.

Cartoon Courtesy of Mike Smith, award-winning editorial cartoonist featured daily in the Las Vegas Sun, L.A. Times, N.Y. Times, USA Today, and many others.

More of his  NASCAR cartoons can be found here:

http://www.lasvegassun.com/sports/racing/carto
ons.html

20 Comments | Add a comment   categories: NASCAR, NASCAR, Winston Cup, Nextel Cup, Daytona 500, Richard Petty, Cale Yarborough, Bill France, Nextel Cup Series, This and That
 
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total comments: 20      Page 1 of 1     
Tezgm99
Jul 29, 2007
1:51 AM
LOL, love the cartoon!

Nice history piece too, Texas :)

Forensic2
Jul 29, 2007
3:07 AM
I was cheering for Richard Petty in 1979, CBS put up in graphics with 10 laps togo. It said, Richard Petty has won every race if he was 3rd or better with 10 laps togo. At that time he was almost a lap down. He said they had already started to fight when he pass by them.

chuxtory
Jul 29, 2007
4:18 AM
Hey Tex.

Even back in '36... 'ol Bill F. knew ..
" They'll give us some $$$ if we paint their name on the side of the car."

I see that when Allison leaves his helmet on during a fistfight, he's tough. When Jeff G. does it.... he's a punk. Double standard?

HotfootLori
Jul 29, 2007
8:34 AM
Great post, Tex! I love the cartoon too.
I've been to Daytona a couple of times and it IS an awesome place.

Good job.

Texascudaguy
Jul 29, 2007
10:22 AM
Tez- Mike Smith has some good stuff. I emailed him when i put the cartoon in the fisrt one. seems like a nice guy. His cartoons are only NASCAR, so he's def a fan.
forensic- Petty was over half a lap down in that race and barely held off a charging Darrel Waltrip. guess we could say he finished in "fist" place. LOL

Texascudaguy
Jul 29, 2007
10:29 AM
Chux.-- good point. while researching big Bill, i found that he only made $100 a race in those early years for organizing and gathering sponsors, drivers, etc... even though 100 buckaroos was pretty good money in '36, seems like he was underpaid.
Gordon has to remove his helmet. Its as big as he is.. He would fall over to easily. love that pic though

Texascudaguy
Jul 29, 2007
10:31 AM
Hottiefoot. I've Never been. But along with a Superbowl, its something i plan to at least do once in my life. Glad u liked the post.

IowaGirl
Jul 29, 2007
11:11 AM
Nice piece Tex! I hope you get a chance to get to Daytona sometime. It's hard to envision how big it is until you see it in person.

photogr
Jul 29, 2007
4:13 PM
Cuda:

Excellent reportage on the history of the good old days.. Was like wandering down memory lane for me.

Last edited by photogr on July 29th at 9:04 PM.

Texascudaguy
Jul 29, 2007
5:12 PM
Thanks photo. I learned a lot about Bill France researching Daytona. Seems to me even then, the guy new he had something that would be great one day. NASCAR's definately come all long way since Granny's coupe in the dirt.

Last edited by Texascudaguy on July 29th at 5:20 PM.

Texascudaguy
Jul 29, 2007
5:22 PM
Iowa. I'll be happy to take your tickets off your hands after you win the Writer challenge.. LOL

lisa4usc
Jul 29, 2007
5:50 PM
Su-weet, and Cale was my fave driver, so the pic of him fighting was priceless. Nice history lesson here Tex..you are now on my faves list...helluva writer and nice guy! Hugs!
lise

Texascudaguy
Jul 29, 2007
6:14 PM
Aww. thanks lisa. Dont know bout the helluva writer part, but I'll take the compliment. :)

Maybe a few non-nascar fans will read it and understand why we get so excited about "Turnin' Left."

IowaGirl
Jul 30, 2007
6:33 AM
Tex - Ha! Thanks for the compliment, but I'm not going to count chickens yet.

klvalus
Jul 30, 2007
8:46 AM
Tex- Great blog...went perfectly with the ESPN specials they have been showing. Loved the cartoon!

Texascudaguy
Jul 30, 2007
9:24 AM
klvalus- I had to get an Eanrhardt reference in somehow. I only got to see that espn special the night they had the Earnhardt wreck on there. It was nice that they didnt show the footage of it. First classy move I've seen by ESPN in a long time.

volfan69
Jul 30, 2007
9:36 AM
I really enjoy your "This and That" posts. I hope you continue doing these. I've been a fan since the 60's. Daytona is a great track. Hubby and I got to ride around the track. It is unbelievable what kind of banking they have there. You can hardly stand up on the track. Bristol is another wonderful experience. I also love the speed at the Atlanta track. We even had a good experience at Homestead--well, the second trip after they "redid" the track. The first trip wasn't that good.

Texascudaguy
Jul 30, 2007
11:25 AM
volfan.
I'll try to continue them. Some topics are hard to find a "That" to counter the "This." HottiefootLori was the one who convinced me to keep the T-n-T format. Might do a few in NFL, but most will probably be in the NASCAR category.

Glad you enjoyed.

OneLastOutlaw
Aug 2, 2007
8:36 PM
ALL RIGHT CUDA THAT'S IT!!!!! I JUST READ AND SAW THE PHOTOS ON ANOTHER BLOG THAT YOU PUT UP AS THE REASON WHY A BLOGGER WAS DISQUALIFED FROM THE NASCAR CONTEST. I HAVE HAD IT WITH YOU. YOU ARE DISQUALIFIED FROM ALL CONTESTS FOR ONE YEAR ON THE GROUNDS OF HILARITY BEYOND THE ALLOWABLE LIMITS AND CAUSING ME TO SPIT MY WATER ALL OVER MY MONITOR. DAMN YOU.

SEE MY BLOG FOR THE REAL REASONS FOX HAS BLOWN THE NASCAR CONTEST. AND NO SMART LOLOLOLL ALEC COMMENTS FROM YOU EITHER CUDA DAMMIT.

Texascudaguy
Aug 11, 2007
11:33 PM
Maybe you can use your Kobe jersey to wipe up the spit Outlaw.. LOL.. doesn't sem to be good for much else these day. :P

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ABOUT ME


Texascudaguy
Just an average sports fan. Enjoy in order of favorites: NFL, NASCAR, College Football, MLB, College Basketball. NBA, and NHL are currently on my "Overrated, Overpaid, and Overhyped" list. Classic Car enthusiast Blog topics -- Big fan of humour, but will occasionally chime in on serious subjects as well. Appreciate quality writing and grammar, and commend it, but will not hold it against those who don't excel in those areas.(I'm definitely nowhere close to perfect either.) Please stop by anytime if the subject intrigues you. Your opinion is always appreciated.
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