Tag: Darlington Southern 500

  • Hot 20 – If baseball has the Mendoza Line, surely NASCAR can have the Danica Line

    Hot 20 – If baseball has the Mendoza Line, surely NASCAR can have the Danica Line

    Mario Mendoza is a member of the Mexican Baseball League’s Hall of Fame, yet his legacy in the Major Leagues is not as illustrious. In fact, when one measures how competent a batsmen has been throughout a season and, indeed, his MLB career, the Mendoza Line is one players strive not to fall below. It began as a club house joke; hit below .200 and one has fallen below the Mendoza Line.  Though he hit .215 over parts of nine Big League campaigns, in five of them Mendoza hit under .200.

    NASCAR has something similar, though unlike baseball’s this is a floating standard. It all comes down to where Danica Patrick falls in the points. Record fewer points than she has, well, you have fallen below the Danica Line. Why Danica, some might ask? She arrived on the scene with tons of hoop-la, buckets of sponsorship cash, and drives top flight equipment, yet her on-track results have been anything but stellar. Heading into Darlington, her average finish in 53 Cup races is worse than 26th. Even in 61 Nationwide races, it took a good day to even crack the Top 20.  Sunday at Texas, she was 27th.

    Granted, that means Dale Earnhardt Jr, Kevin Harvick, and Kurt Busch all finished below the Danica Line on that day, finishing 43rd, 42nd , and 39th respectively. However, of the other 13 cars that finished behind her, I would wager that each and every one of those drivers would have given their eye teeth to have been able to be in her car instead of their own.  

    For Kevin Harvick, the new points system, where wins trump points, has been a real blessing. If NASCAR had gone with my idea of giving 22 additional points for victories and tossing out the Chase, he would have become somewhat irrelevant already, a Phoenix win or not.

    Here is a look at our most dominant hot 20 drivers this season, and where the Danica Line is set coming in to the Southern 500 in Darlington on Saturday night.

     

    Driver

    Races

    Win

    Points

    LW

    1

      Carl Edwards

    7

    1

    269

    2

    2

      Jeff Gordon

    7

    0

    259

    4

    3

      Joey Logano

    7

    1

    257

    8

    4

      Matt Kenseth

    7

    0

    255

    3

    5

      Kyle Busch

    7

    1

    253

    5

    6

      Dale Earnhardt, Jr.

    7

    1

    250

    1

    7

      Brad Keselowski

    7

    1

    240

    6

    8

      Jimmie Johnson

    7

    0

    228

    7

    9

      Brian Vickers

    7

    0

    205

    14

    10

      Paul Menard

    7

    0

    203

    12

    11

      Ryan Newman

    7

    0

    202

    10

    12

      Austin Dillon

    7

    0

    202

    9

    13

      Denny Hamlin

    6

    0

    197

    13

    14

      Tony Stewart

    7

    0

    189

    17

    15

      Kyle Larson

    7

    0

    187

    NR

    16

      Greg Biffle

    7

    0

    187

    20

    17

      Clint Bowyer

    7

    0

    187

    19

    18

      Marcos Ambrose

    7

    0

    186

    15

    19

      Kasey Kahne

    7

    0

    178

    NR

    20

      Kurt Busch

    7

    1

    173

    11

    21

      A.J. Allmendinger

    7

    0

    173

    18

    22

      Jamie McMurray

    7

    0

    167

    23

      Aric Almirola

    7

    0

    164

    24

      Casey Mears

    7

    0

    162

    25

      Ricky Stenhouse, Jr.

    7

    0

    154

    26

      Kevin Harvick

    7

    1

    150

    27

      Martin Truex, Jr.

    7

    0

    131

    28

      Justin Allgaier

    7

    0

    129

    29

      Danica Patrick

    7

    0

    121

    30

      Reed Sorenson

    7

    0

    113

    31

      David Gilliland

    7

    0

    107

    32

      Michael Annett

    7

    0

    103

    33

      Cole Whitt

    7

    0

    99

    34

      David Ragan

    7

    0

    94

    35

      Alex Bowman

    7

    0

    85

    36

      Josh Wise

    6

    0

    67

    37

      Travis Kvapil

    6

    0

    52

    38

      Ryan Truex

    5

    0

    47

    39

      Michael McDowell

    5

    0

    40

    40

      Parker Kligerman

    7

    0

    40

  • NASCAR Champions Featuring Herb Thomas

    Cup Champion 1951 and 1953
    Birthday: 04/06/1923
    Death: 08/09/2000
    Hometown:  Olivia, NC

    Richard Petty gave high praise to Herb Thomas upon his induction into the 2013 NASCAR Hall of Fame.

    “He was as good as they come,” Petty said. “There have been very few guys who had more confidence in what he could do than Herb. He was so strong-minded that he ‘willed’ his wins and what he was doing on the track. He was going to beat the guys on the track no matter what was going on. That was his mind set.”

    NASCAR historian Buz McKim echoed Petty’s sentiments saying, ‘He (Herb Thomas) might have had probably the most natural talent of nearly anyone in the early days of the sport. The minute he got behind the wheel, he was phenomenal.”

    Herbert Watson Thomas was born in the small town of Olivia, North Carolina in 1923. He farmed, worked at a saw mill and eventually started racing as a hobby.

    When Bill France began organizing races under the newly formed NASCAR, Thomas saw the possibilities and decided to pursue a career in racing.

    Thomas raced as an owner/driver and put most of his winnings back into his cars.  In his first full season of competition in 1950, Thomas captured his first victory at Martinsville Speedway.

    His career took off in 1951 when he began driving what would come to be known as the “Fabulous Hudson Hornet.” Thomas also joined up with the legendary Smokey Yunick and began a legendary partnership.

    Thomas was one of the most successful drivers of his era. Although he only drove for seven full seasons, his list of accomplishments speaks volumes.

    Herb Thomas was the first driver to win two Cup Championships, the first owner/driver to win a championship and the first three-time winner of the historic Darlington Southern 500.

    He earned two championships in 1951 and 1953, finished second in the point standings in 1952 and 1954 and finished fifth in 1955.

    Thomas won 48 times in 228 starts giving him a winning percentage of 21.05. His winning percentage set a record which remains unbroken today.

    He retired from racing at the end of the 1962 season and went back to tobacco farming. Thomas also owned a trucking company which he operated on a part time basis.

    He passed away on August 9, 2000 after a heart attack, at the age of 77.

    In racing and in life Herb Thomas always gave 100 percent. The legacy he left for his family was not all about trophies but more about life lessons.

    “Most of what I know about his racing, I learned from my Grandma Helen,” his grandson, Chris, told me. “You would have never known he was a NASCAR driver simply because he just did not talk about those days much. You did know that he was a very hard working farmer who expected the best. I think he wanted to be remembered for being the best that he could be at everything he did.”

    Accomplishments:
    1951 Cup champion
    1953 Cup champion
    1957 Recipient of the Buddy Schuman Award
    1965 Inducted into the National Motorsports Press Association Hall of Fame
    1992 Inducted into the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame
    1994 Inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame
    1998 Named one of NASCAR’s “50 Greatest Drivers”
    2010 Nominee to the NASCAR Hall of Fame
    2011 Nominee to the NASCAR Hall of Fame
    2012 Nominee to the NASCAR Hall of Fame
    2013 Inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame

  • NASCAR Beginnings Featuring ‘Mad’ Marion MacDonald, Herman ‘The Turtle’ Beam & More

    NASCAR Beginnings Featuring ‘Mad’ Marion MacDonald, Herman ‘The Turtle’ Beam & More

    The best thing about researching NASCAR history is the little nuggets you find along the way. Many

    of these jewels never find their way into an article, but they are all worth remembering. Some of the names you’ll recognize and some may be unfamiliar. Not everyone can be a star, but that doesn’t mean they don’t have a story to tell.

    If you think racing in NASCAR is more competitive today than it’s ever been, you might want to think again. Back in the day, some drivers would do anything for that little extra advantage.

    “Mad” Marion MacDonald is a perfect example. He was born in Florida in 1918 and learned to drive in the family orange orchard.

    “One day I hit the railroad tracks and my car jumped a four-foot gate on the other side. After that I never opened that gate again,” he said.

    MacDonald began his flirtation with racing In 1938 when he went to work for Bill France at his gas station in Daytona Beach. He had his own unique way of doing things. No one can say for certain where he got his nickname, but there are plenty of tales to choose from.

    At age 21 he entered the beach road course at Daytona driving his personal car. He tied himself into the car with a rope and had a knife taped to the dash so he could cut himself free if an emergency arose. During a pit stop, MacDonald grabbed a hamburger from one of his crew during a pit stop and continued to eat it as he raced around the track. Maybe he was simply hungry or maybe he just loved showing off for the fans.

    Later in that same race, MacDonald came upon a stalled car. The driver had climbed out of the car and to avoid hitting him Mad Marion had to go high. The next thing you knew, he was up on the dunes on two wheels, as he drove past the stunned driver.

    But the story doesn’t end there. MacDonald had figured out that taking the turn on two wheels improved his speed so he repeated the maneuver throughout the race, taking several of the turns on two wheels.

    Most would agree that going fast is the best way to win races. It may surprise you to know that at least one driver took the opposite approach.

    Herman “The Turtle” Beam drove in the Grand National series from 1957 to 1963. His claim to fame comes from holding the record for the longest streak of races without a DNF, with 84. Beam was a master at getting the most out of a dollar. He built his own cars, towed them himself and knew exactly what he had to do to make a little money.

    Gene Glover, a fellow racer, said of Beam, “he knew the distance to each racetrack, how many gallons of gas it took to get there, what you had to do to qualify for the race, how much money the race paid for each position, and where he thought he could finish.”

    “They called him ‘Herman the Turtle’ because he had good equipment, but he just didn’t want to drive fast, so he just got down on the apron and stayed out of the way. A lot of times, he’d end up with good finishes.”

    This may sound a little crazy, but you have to remember that back in those days, it wasn’t unusual for half the field to fall out of a race with mechanical issues or due to crashes. Beam’s survival strategy often netted good results. In 194 races, he had 57 top ten finishes.

    “Everybody respected Herman and his mechanical abilities,” Johnson City racer Paul Lewis said. “He was very intelligent and very articulate, and he always had good equipment.”

    “He just didn’t like to drive fast.”

    Many of today’s drivers have been groomed from an early age to appeal to the corporate sponsors that have allowed NASCAR to flourish. For the most part, we never get to see the men or women behind this polished image. But NASCAR history is littered with colorful characters. What you see is what you get. Their antics both on and off the track speak of a time when racing was fueled by testosterone and you never knew what was going to happen next.

    Joe Weatherly had a short but significant career. He only ran two full seasons in NASCAR’s premier series and won Cup championships both seasons, in 1962 and 1963. He was known for his hard racing and famous for his practical jokes. “The Clown Prince of Racing,” Weatherly never missed an opportunity to have some fun.

    In the days before cars had start switches, Weatherly would sneak along pit road and steal the keys to all the cars. When the command, “Gentlemen, start your engines,” was given, Joe’s car was the only one to fire up. In Darlington for a race, Weatherly came up with one of his most well-known pranks. He paid a farmer $100.00 for a mule. The next day, Weatherly proudly rode the mule, complete with race stickers, in the Darlington parade.

    Then there’s the story of Jim Vandiver who put new meaning into the phrase “running from the law.”

    Jim Vandiver began racing in NASCAR’s top division in 1968. His Cup career spanned 14 seasons with 24 top ten finishes. But he’s most famous for an incident that happened at the 1973 Darlington Southern 500. During the race, he spun and brought out a caution. He came to a stop in turn 3, jumped from his car, ran up the banking and disappeared from the track. It seems that two deputy sheriffs had been standing in Vandiver’s pit, waiting to arrest him after he finished the race.

    Vandiver was in the middle of a child custody dispute and was supposed to be in court the same day as the race. He thought his lawyer had taken care of things, but the judge had charged him with contempt of court. He had been tipped off ahead of the race that the law would be waiting for him.

    “When the field got slowed down I jumped out of my car,” Vandiver said, “ran across the track and jumped the wall. When I got to a chain linked fence it was like someone knew I was coming because right there the fence had been cut like somebody done snuck into the race so I went right through it to the road outside the track.”

    I’d like to leave you with two more stories. NASCAR is all about statistics. New records are set and old records are broken. However, there are a couple of NASCAR finishes that were so unique that it is unlikely they will ever be repeated. Both happened in the 1950’s.

    On September 30, 1956, at Asheville-Weaverville Speedway, there was a 200 lap race with 24 cars in the field. On lap 181, Curtis Turner took the lead. There were only 14 other cars left in the race. Suddenly a huge crash broke out behind Turner and he was the only one to get through it unscathed.  He pulled into his pit and the race was called. To this day, it’s the only race that has ever ended with just one car running.

    Raleigh Speedway was the site of another unusual finish. The 100 mile race took place on September 30, 1952 and two sets of brothers would accomplish something that had never been done. Fonty Flock finished first and Herb Thomas took second place. But it’s the third and fourth place finishes that will amaze you. Fonty’s brother Tim finished third and Herb’s brother Donald finished in fourth place.

    From the astounding to the hysterical, NASCAR history is a treasure trove waiting to be explored. You never know what you’re going to discover but one thing is certain. You always leave with a smile on your face.

    Thanks to legendsofnascar.com, Tom Higgins and laidbackracing.com, Patty Kay at insiderracingnews.com and David Scercy at bleacherreport.com