|
|
||||||
What made this
F1/USA/sports-car racing standout feel compelled to mix it
up with the Good Ol’ Boys? "I always suspected I
could probably do pretty well with a stock car at a road
race,’ says Gurney. "I was a road racer and an oval
racer, and we (including such contemporaries as A.J. Foyt,
Mario Andretti, and Parnelli Jones) drove lots of different
cars: Indy, Can Am, sports cars. We were hungry, we loved to
race, we wanted to jump into almost anything and adapt as
rapidly as possible. You learn things in every car you
drive, something you can apply to any end of the
spectrum."
Gurney heaps praise on the Wood Brothers, his team owners
and legendary pit strategists, for his success in this
environment. "Leonard and Glen were among the first
ones to attack things scientifically. In (pit-stop)
practice, they timed everything. When they realized a
certain person or thing or system seemed quicker, they noted
it and built upon it. They practiced everything, looking for
efficiency and every little advantage. Their cars were
always well prepared, And they downplayed their abilities,
sort of like quiet hillbilly types. But ‘hillbilly science’
is as good as any science out there, and they were more
scientific than most."
It was A.J. Foyt who again seemed prepared to foil Gurney’s
attempt to win for a third time in 1965. But on lap 165.
Foyt’s brakes failed, and Gurney again cruised home for
the win. This time, the spoils included a new Hurst-equipped
Pontiac GTO. Nobody even dared predict anything but a Gurney
win for 1966. According to MT Technical Editor Jim Ethridge:
"Gurney’s driving style could hardly be improved with
magic. As always, he never appeared to overextend himself.
Most of the time, it seemed he wasn’t even trying. Gurney
made no mention of black arts, but credited Ford, Goodyear,
and the Wood Brothers pit crew for making his win such an
easy task."
He again sat on the pole
and set record-smashing lap times during the race. Leading
comfortably, with a little more than 40 laps remaining,
track debris from a previous accident shredded his left rear
tire as he was heading into Riverside’s sweeping turn 9, a
long right-hander. The fact that Gurney kept it off the wall
is amazing in and of itself. The crew needed one-and-a-half
minutes to remove the blazing-hot wheel-and-tire shrapnel;
Dan returned to the track in third place. He retook the
lead, only to give it up again on his final stop. Gurney
passed Jones on lap 160, then held on for his fifth NASCAR
victory at Riverside. |
||||||
|
Return to: Bits & Pieces |