Cedar Rapids, Iowa – Before we start the New Year, let’s
take a look back – 30 years ago to be exact, and recall some of the special
highlights that shaped the 1983 season.
Howard Tiedt, promoter of Santa Fe Speedway in Hinsdale,
Ill., was named RPM Promoter of the Year during the 10th edition of
the Race Promoter’s Workshop in Daytona, Fla., during Speed Weeks festivities on
February 16.
Mark Malcuit of Strasburg, Ohio, was the overall late model winner
of the World Series of Asphalt Racing at New Smyrna (Fla.) Speedway in
February. The 17th annual event had nine nights of racing showcasing
the best short-track drivers in the nation. Malcuit, known as “Captain Sizzle”,
claimed the overall title by only 12 markers (1,602 – 1,590) over Dick Trickle
of Wisconsin Rapids, Wis. Mike Eddy of Midland, Mich., was third with 1,390
points.
Steve Kinser of Bloomington, Ind., broke a four-year Florida
victory jinx by winning the 50-lap World of Outlaws National Challenge Series
sprint car feature at East Bay Raceway in Gibsonton, Fla., on February 15,
putting him in the early lead in the World of Outlaws point standings. Kinser’s
win came in the finale of the four-night Southern Sprint Nationals. Doug
Wolfgang won the opener on February 9, Danny Smith took honors on February 11,
and Keith Kauffman notched the victory on February 14.
Four-time Knoxville National champion Kenny Weld and two
other people were arrested and $5 million in cocaine was seized by federal
agents during a raid in Blue Springs, Mo., on March 19. Weld was charged with
possession of marijuana and cocaine with intent to sell. The 29 pounds of
cocaine found in the house was the largest amount ever seized in Western
Missouri, federal authorities said. Weld
was the Knoxville Nationals champion in 1964, ’65, ’72, and ’73.
Hector Honore of Pana, Ill., whose “Black Deuce” was the
winningest sprint car in racing history, passed away on March 3. As a car owner
and mechanic, Honore won seven consecutive IMCA big car national titles (1955 –
1961) with two different drivers, Bobby Grim and Pete Folse. He won 434
features, 704 heat races, and 216 track records. He was inducted into the
National Sprint Car Hall of Fame in 1991.
Larry Phillips of Springfield, Mo., put away a mid-race
challenge from Billy Moyer of Des Moines, Iowa, to win his third consecutive
“Miller Beer Kegger” at Tri-City Speedway in Fort Smith, Ark., on March 26.
Phillips paced the 16-car field in his blue and white #75 around the
high-banked half-mile for the entire 40 laps and collected $1,500 for his
efforts. Despite faster lap times, Moyer could not get around the crafty
Phillips and would settle for second. Dhon Hauserman of Wichita, Kan., took
third, Vic Bentlage of Jefferson City, Mo., earned fourth and Ken Essary of
Galena, Mo., rounded out the top five.
Butch Miller recorded a wire-to-wire victory in the ASA
Circuit of Champions season-opening “Budweiser 100” at the Pontiac Silverdome
on March 27. With a reported crowd of 17,212 looking on, Miller, who earned the
pole position by winning his qualifying race, finished one car-length in front
of Tom Jones to cash in the $6,000 winner’s check. Dick Trickle, Bob Strait,
and Bobby Dotter rounded out the top five.
Dick Trickle of Wisconsin Rapids, Wis., captured the sixth
annual “Spring Classic” at Rockford (Ill.) Speedway on April 10. Several
thousand fans, braving northerly winds and temperatures in the 30’s, watched
Trickle pilot his Superamerica #99 to victory in the 83-lap feature, which
marked the kickoff of ARTGO’s ninth season. Dave Weltmeyer of Harvey, Ill., Tom
Musgrave Glenview, Ill., Conrad Morgan of Dousman, Wis., and Steve Burgess of
Eau Claire, Wis., followed Trickle across the finish line to round out the top
five.
Sammy Swindell of Bartlett, Tenn., was a double winner on
the World of Outlaws circuit as he scored victories at Lakeside Speedway in
Kansas City on April 15 and the very next night at the Knoxville (Iowa) Raceway
season opener. Driving the Old Milwaukee #1, Swindell would battle a determined
Keith Kauffman of Mifflintown, Pa., on both nights and bank $6,000 for his
efforts. Despite the chilly spring weather, attendance was good at both tracks
with Lakeside reporting 6,000 fans in attendance for Friday night’s show and
Knoxville with 7,000 cheering.
Joe Wallace of Kansas City played the waiting game and it
paid off with a $3,500 paycheck after winning the RC Cola/7 Up “Western World
Late Model Championships” at Manzanita Speedway in Phoenix, Ariz., on April 16.
Wallace started third and patiently waited behind Larry Phillips before making
his move for the lead halfway through the 40-lapper. Once out in front, Wallace
was able to maintain his lead and finish ahead of Red Dralle of Evansdale, Iowa
and Don Hoffman of Des Moines.
Dave Birkhofer of Muscatine, Iowa, topped a sparkling field
of late models by capturing the annual “Spring Championship” at West Liberty
Raceway on April 23. Fifty-six late models lined the pit area looking at
winning the $1,000 top prize. Birkhofer passed Rick Wendling of Hazelton, Iowa,
on lap 12 of the 30-lap main event and opened up a wide margin to win
comfortably. Dick Schiltz of Waterloo, Iowa, Roger Dolan of Lisbon, Iowa, Rick
Wages of Moline, Ill., and Rollie Frink of Davenport, Iowa, followed. Mike Schulte
of Norway, Iowa, won the IMCA modified feature and Steve Watts of Danville,
Iowa, took street stock honors.
Sam Jacobs of Columbus, Neb., topped a field of more than 30
late models at Adams County Speedway in Corning, Iowa, to claim the $800 top
prize in the fourth annual “Gold Cup” on April 23. Jacobs grabbed the lead
early in the feature and then had to hold off Don Weyenrich of Norfolk, Neb.,
in the late stages to secure the victory. Glenn Robey of Omaha took third, Bob
Hill of Randall, Iowa, fourth, and Bruce Mark of Williams, Iowa, fifth.
Joe Kosiski won both Saturday and Sunday night features in
the “Spring Spectacular” at Lakeside Speedway in Kansas City in April 23 and
24. The newly-wed from Omaha won his heat and then scored the win after
battling his brother Steve in the 20-lap feature on Saturday night and then
followed that up with a dominant performance in the 30-lap finale on Sunday
evening, leading green to checker.
Al Schill and Dick Trickle each captured 50-lap feature
races with Schill taking the overall championship in the ARTGO-sanctioned late
model special at Grundy County Speedway in Morris, Ill., in April 24. Schill, a
38-year-old speedster from Franklin, Wis., captured his first ARTGO win of the
season in the opening feature. Joe Shear of Beloit, Wis., Jim and Jay Sauter of
Necedah, Wis., and Trickle trailed Schill at the finish. Trickle would show his stuff in the second
50-lapper, powering past Jim Sauter on lap 19 and wasting no time in building a
comfortable margin, winning by a quarter of a lap. Schill would finish second,
clinching the overall title with Jim Weber of Roseville, Minn., taking third,
Tom Musgrave of Glenview, Ill., in fourth, and Marl Malcuit of Strasburg, Ohio,
taking fifth.
Dick Schiltz of Waterloo, Iowa, scored his first NASCAR
Grand American late model victory of the year as he topped the field in the
“Pepsi Spring Championships” at the Iowa State Speedway in Des Moines on April
30. Schiltz held off Bob Hill of
Randall, Iowa, for the victory, while Ed Sanger of Waterloo was third, Scott
Sells of Waverly, Iowa, fourth and Denny Osborn of Cedar Falls, Iowa, took
fifth. Jack Mitchell of Cedar Falls
debuted a new IMCA modified and captured the feature over Dean Schroeder of
Iowa Falls, Iowa, and Mike Schulte of Norway, Iowa.
Sammy Swindell led but 50 feet of the World of Outlaws
National Challenge Series 30-lap feature at Huset’s Speedway in Sioux Falls,
S.D., on April 30. However, it was the last 50 feet. Swindell overtook Ron
Shuman of Mesa, Ariz., on the front stretch for the checkered flag when Shuman
got held back by lapped traffic. Shuman would claim the bridesmaid spot after
leading the race for 19 laps and heading for his first career World of Outlaws’
victory.
Joe Kosiski powered his way to the front early and held on
to capture his second consecutive “Spring Invitational at Sunset Speedway in
Omaha on April 30. Joe’s brother Steve
would finish second in the 50-lap feature, giving the Kosiski brothers 30
percent of the $16,000 purse. Joe would cash in $3,000 for the victory while
Steve took home $1,500. The 25-lap sportsman feature saw Lavern Lehman of
Waterloo, Iowa; take home the $800 first prize.
Dick Trickle outran Rusty Wallace of Valley Park, Mo., to
record his second ASA Circuit of Champions victory of the campaign in the
“Badgerland 150” at Wisconsin State Fair Park Speedway in West Allis on May 1.
Trickle took home $8,050 from a purse of $$5,350 contributed from a crowd of
14,220 fans who turned out despite high winds and temperatures in the 40’s. Trickle
and Wallace swapped the lead back and forth early on in the contest before
Trickle gained control at the halfway point. He would spend the second half of
the race fending off Wallace’s advances and win by a little over a second at
the finish. Jim Sauter would come home in third, Bob Senneker of Dorr, Mich.,
took fourth, and Bob Strait of Flossmoor, Ill., grabbed fifth.
Bad weather continued to plague tracks across six Midwest
states early on in the season. Cold temperatures, heavy rains and high winds
forced cancellations of special events and postponed numerous season openers at
many tracks.
The racing world would mourn the loss of two young racers.
Dana Carter (30 years old) of Huntington Beach, Calif., the younger brother of
Duane “Pancho” Carter, would suffer a heart attack after a race in Indianapolis
on May 5 while Jim Dunn (34 years old) of Roseville, Ohio, would lose his life
in a racing mishap at Paducah, Ky., on May 8.
Jack Hewitt of Troy, Ohio, became the 12th
different winner in the 13-year history of the Tony Hulman Classic USAC sprint
car race at the Terre Haute (Ind.) Action Track on May 8. Hewitt, who started
seventh in the 20-car field, guided his sprinter into second place behind Larry
Dickson after the first lap. Making his first USAC sprint car appearance in
over two years, Hewitt passed Dickson on lap six and led the remainder of the
30-lap main event, finishing several car-lengths ahead of runner-up Ken
Schrader.
Terry Baldry of Omro, Wis., scored the biggest win of his
career at the Wisconsin International Raceway in Kaukauna, when he outraced Joe
Shear of Beloit, Wis., to capture the “Budweiser Spring Classic” 50-lap late
model feature on Sunday afternoon, May 15. With a crowd of 6,718 looking on,
Baldry came from deep in the starting field to pass Shear on lap 36. The
defending Fox River Racing Club champion would not be challenged after that,
winning handily. Shear would settle for
second with Bob Iverson of Hyde, Mich., third, Tom Musgrave of Glenview, Ill.,
fourth and Tom Reffner of Rudolph, Wis., fifth.
Steve Kinser easily won the USAC sprint car race at Santa Fe
Speedway in Willow Springs, Ill., on May 20. Kinser passed Steve Long on lap
nine of the 30-lapper and was never challenged afterwards. Kinser was followed
by Danny Milburn, Ken Schrader, Sheldon Kinser and Long
Rookie Teo Fabi, an Italian road racer and rookie at
Indianapolis Motor Speedway, shocked the racing world by breaking both the
one-lap and four-lap qualifying records to become only the second rookie ever
to win the pole position for the Indianapolis 500 on May 21. Fabi, 27, drove
his Cosworth-powered March to an average speed of 207.395 miles per hour with a
fast lap of 208.049 mph.
After a frustrating start to the ASA Circuit of Champions’
season, Bob Senneker left no doubt that the “Michigan Bluebird” was back to
form, winning the 300-lap feature at Queen City Speedway in West Chester, Ohio,
on May 22. Senneker had resisted the trend among ASA pilots to switch to the
shorter wheelbase 1982-83 Camaro/Firebird models for the season, keeping his
trusty 1981 version. After qualifying third, Senneker would stay with the
frontrunners for most of the race, slipping by Rusty Wallace for the top spot
on lap 238. He would hold off a hard-charging Dick Trickle at the end and win
by less than a second. Senneker collected $5,715 from $42,100 in posted awards
to notch ASA career victory number 43.
Marvin Carman of Union City, Mich., won the 35th
annual “Little 500” at Anderson (Ind.) Speedway on May 28. It was Carman’s
second consecutive win in the long-endurance event and it was run in the
relatively slow time of 2 hours, 24 minutes, and 29 seconds. Carman had a
six-lap edge at the checkered over runner-up Sonny Hartley of Orlando, Fla.,
who was driving relief for Ronnie Smith of Lutz, Fla. Jim Moulis, who finished
second the year before, lost five laps when he pitted for a tire change on lap
488. He finished third nine laps off the pace. A rash of caution flags, 15 in
all, caused the field to slow their pace for a total of 131 laps.
Frank Gawlinski nailed down first and second place finishes
in twin 50-lap features to take the overall championship in A RTGO Racing’s
fourth annual “Chicagoland Showdown” at Illiana Motor Speedway in Schererville,
Ind., on May 28. Gawlinski, a two-time Illiana track champ, claimed his first
ATRGO win of the year, sharing 50-lap victory honors with three-time circuit
champion Dick Trickle.
Dick Trickle and Joe Shear each recorded first and second
place finishes in twin 50-lap features, which highlighted ARTGO Racing’s
“Spring Nationals” at Capital Super Speedway in Oregon, Wis., on May 29. By
virtue of his fast time qualifying run during time trials, Trickle was crowned
overall winner of the event, which was delayed a week by rain.
His car beaten and battered, Rusty Wallace won the “Silver
Creek 300” for the ASA Racing Series late models at Toledo (Ohio) Speedway on
June 4. Wallace tangled with two cars early in the contest, causing severe
sheet metal damage but he took advantage of extended caution periods to make
repairs and managed to lead the last 124 circuits of the 300-lap grind.
Rich Vogler breezed to an easy victory in the 30-lap sprint
feature and Ken Schrader nabbed the 30-lap midget headliner to highlight the
Don Branson-Jud Larson Memorial USAC doubleheader at Eldora Speedway in
Rossburg, Ohio, on June 4.
Dean Roper passed Bobby Jacks on lap 59 and went on to win
the ARCA/USAC-sanctioned “American 100” at the Illinois State Fairgrounds in
Springfield on June 5. Jacks, an ARCA regular, placed second and were followed
by Rick O’Brien, Terry Pearson and Jerry Churchill.
Not even a touch of the flu could stop Dick Trickle from
scoring a clean sweep of ARTGO-sanctioned late model action to highlight the
ninth annual “Dr. Pepper 100” at La Crosse Interstate Speedway in West Salem,
Wis., on June 5. The 41-year-old legend from Wisconsin Rapids opened the event
by setting fast time with a 19.278 second tour of the .514-mile oval in
qualifications and then won both of the division’s 50-lap main events.
Roger Dolan of Lisbon, Iowa, played a waiting game as he won
the 11th annual “Miller 100” at Hawkeye Downs in Cedar Rapids on June
7. Dolan started on the outside of the second row and stayed near the front the
whole race, but used a lap 93 pass of Ken Walton of Viola, Iowa, to annex the
victory. It was Dolan’s first win in the charity event. Walton held on to
finish second while polesitter Bill Rice of Des Moines took third. Ed Sanger of
Waterloo and Jim Burbridge of Delhi rounded out the top five. NASCAR star Bobby
Allison of Hueytown, Ala., finished 20th after being involved in an
early race crash.
Defending USAC midget champion Kevin Olson of Machesney
Park, Ill., returned to racing with style as he won the 40-lap feature in the
“Badger Midget vs. USAC Shootout” at Hales Corner Speedway in Franklin, Wis.,
on June 10. It was Olson’s first appearance since he suffered a serious back
injury at the Seattle Kingdome on March 19. Olson snared the lead from Stan Fox
on lap 12 and then held off a determined Rich Vogler for the remaining laps to
pick up the victory.
Former race car driver Ron Perdock of Knoxville, Iowa, was
killed in a plane crash just north of Knoxville on Sunday morning, June 12. The
35-year-old car dealer was originally from Washington, Iowa, and had competed
at West Liberty Raceway for many years before moving to Ames, Iowa. He was
track champion at Hamilton County Speedway in Webster City, Iowa, in the early
70’s.
Dick Trickle, a five-time state champion, took the first
step towards garnering a sixth title by winning the 60-lap late model feature
in the Red, White, and Blue series opener at Wisconsin International Raceway in
Kaukauna, Wis., on Sunday afternoon, June 12. With a crowd of 5,831 on hand,
Trickle cast aside engine problems which bothered him in qualifying and the
trophy dash, to grab the lead on the 27th circuit in a wild scramble
with Bob Iverson and Jim Sauter. He would win by six car lengths over Tom
Reffner.
Gary Webb of Davenport, Iowa, took over the lead when Rollie
Frink, also of Davenport, suffered a flat tire, and went on to post the victory
in the annual “Pabst Blue Ribbon 100” at East Moline (Ill.) Speedway on June
14. Frink took the lead and was in command when he suffered the flat tire on a
lap 41 restart. Webb took over at that point and led the rest of the way. Ron
Gustaf of East Moline, who applied pressure to Webb over the last portion of
the event, finished second. Roger Long of Fithian, Ill. Grabbed third, Frink
came back to finish fourth and Ed Sanger of Waterloo, Iowa, was fifth.
Dick Trickle finished second to Mike Eddy of Midland, Mich.,
in the first 75-lap main event, but came back to win the second to dominate the
rain-plagued opening round of the “Slinger Nationals” at Slinger (Wis.) Super
Speedway on Wednesday, June 15. Eddy, in his Slinger debut took over the lead
on lap five and led the remaining 70 circuits in dominating the first feature. In
the second feature, Trickle would inherit the top spot on lap 44 when race
leader Mark Martin of Charlotte, N.C., spun trying to avoid a lapped car.
Trickle would set a fast pace for the rest of the race and win easily over
NASCAR’s Bobby Allison and Alan Kulwicki of Greenfield, Wis.
Rick Wages of Moline, Ill., in his first appearance at
Hawkeye Raceway in Blue Grass, Iowa, won the 50-lap Late Model special event on
Thursday night, June 16. Wages won a thriller over Ron Weedon of Pleasant
Valley that saw the two hot shoes side-by-side and nose to tail for the second
half of the feature. Roy Pestka of Davenport took third followed by Ron Gustaf
of East Moline, Ill. Jack Lueth of Davenport was the IMCA Modified winner while
Bob Dominacki of Bettendorf took the Bomber feature win.
After three days of rainouts, the ninth annual “Ironman
Invitational” finally got off the ground on June 16 and saw veteran Leon Plank
of Eau Claire, Wis., take his second straight win. Plank, who started on the
fifth row, took the lead from Red Steffen, also of Eau Claire, with only a few
laps remaining to take the win. Rick Egersdorf of St. Paul, Minn., took third,
Rick Popovich of Duluth, Minn., fourth and Jerry Legatt of St. Cloud, Minn.,
fifth.
Denny Houseman of Estherville, Iowa, led from start to
finish in the 20-lap main event to win the “Joel Taylor Memorial” at VFW
Speedway in Jackson, Minn., on June 18. Houseman was never threatened during
the race, which netted him $1,200. Taking a solid second was Todd Mack of East
Grand Forks, N.D.
Steve Kinser pocketed over $4,000 en route to winning the
ninth annual “Missouri Sprint Car Nationals” in Sedalia, Mo., on June 18. The
Bloomington, Ind., driver won both Friday and Saturday night’s 25-lap features.
Temporarily driving the C.K. Spurlock/Gambler #18, Kinser kept a comfortable
distance over Doug Wolfgang of Sioux Falls, S.D., who claimed second ahead of
Rick Hood of Memphis, Tenn., Randy Smith of Norwalk, Iowa, and John Sernett of
Tulsa, Okla.
Dick Trickle combined first and second place finishes in the
twin 75-lap features to take the overall title of Minnesota State Champion at
Raceway Park in Shakopee, Minn., on June 21. The ARTGO-sanctioned late model
event was held before a capacity crowd as the series made its first-ever stop
at the paved quarter-mile. Trickle, who tallied his 25th feature win
of the year in the second 75-lapper, shared the victory spotlight with NASCAR
regular Mark Martin who won the opening 75-lap main. Martin would suffer a flat
tire in the nightcap and settle for ninth. Despite heavy rains in the morning,
the program, the first late model card there in10 years, went on as planned
with NASCAR’s Buddy Baker on hand.
Dick Schiltz, a Minnesota native, who calls Waterloo, Iowa,
home, returned to his native soil on June 22 and posted a convincing win in a
NASCAR divisional Grand American race at Fairmont Speedway. The event marked
the first time a NASCAR Grand American race had been held in Minnesota and was
also the first NASCAR event staged on a dirt track in the Gopher State.
Schiltz, the current NASCAR Central Region point’s leader, grabbed his eighth
feature win of the season.
Rick Ferkel of Tiffin, Ohio, grabbed the first of the
three-race series of the “J & L Gas-Wilmot Winged Open Sprint Series” at
Wilmot (Wis.) Raceway on June 25. Ferkel was only 21st fastest of 41
in qualifying, but improved quickly, winning his 10-lap heat, 25-lap B main and
the top prize of $2,000 in the 50-lap main event. Ferkel started 13th
in the 20-car field but found that number not unlucky as he took the lead on
lap 13. Bob Robel, Rick Lemanski, Dean Shirley and Chuck Amati rounded out the
top five finishers.
Along with former announcer Doc Lemon, sprint car drivers
Jerry Weld of Kansas City, 1961 Knoxville Nationals champion Roy Robbins, and
Missouri’s Gary Scott were inducted into the Knoxville Raceway Hall of Fame on
June 25.
Randy Smith took advantage of the mechanical plagued Cliff
Woodward on the white flag lap to win the National Speedways Contest
Association-sanctioned sprint car event at Eagle (Neb.) Raceway on June 24. The
$1,000 victory also moved Smith into the NSCA point’s lead and closer to the
$10,000 point’s fund. Woodward commanded the race for the first 23 laps with
only one serious challenge coming from Bob Thoman. Thoman experienced a sour
engine as well, but managed to limp home in third place.
After being rained out on June 28, the “Chevron 50”, a
special race at Hawkeye Raceway near Bluegrass, Iowa, took place on June 28
Rollie Frink of Davenport dominated the late model competition, winning both
his heat and the 50-lap feature. Although he led wire to wire, it wasn’t an
easy victory for Frink. Rick Wages of Moline, Ill., challenged him in the early
going and Dave Birkhofer of Muscatine, Iowa, was hot on his heels in the late
stages of the race. Bettendorf’s Bob Dominacki visited the winner’s circle in
the bomber division for the fourth time of the year, Jeff Marburger of Sabula,
Iowa took sportsman honors and Rick Wages won the IMCA modified main event.
Kevin Stepan of Mosinee, Wis., scored the biggest win of his
young career, taking overall honors in the third annual “Larry Detjens
Memorial” at State Park Speedway in Wausau, Wis., on June 30. Stepan finished
the evening with 102 points, 13 better than runner-up Dick Trickle. Stepan took
lead from Wausau’s Wayne Lodholz on lap 16 of the first of two 25-lap features
and then held off Mike Miller of Marietta, Ga., in a 10-lap dogfight.
J.J. Smith of Appleton, Wis., wheeled his 1983 Thunderbird
to a 10 car-length victory in the 20-lap late model feature on June 30 in Fox
River Racing Club action before a crowd of 9,378, the largest ever to attend a
race at the Kaukauna track and the largest in FRRC’s 33-year-old history.
Marvin Smith of Newark, Ohio, scored his second ARCA
Supercar Series victory of the season in the “Winchester 100” at Winchester
(Ind.) Speedway on July 1. After pitting for fresh tires on lap 56, Smith passed
Bobby Jacks of Huber Heights, Ohio, for the lead on lap 81 and then beat Duane
Pierson of Villa Park, Ill., by four seconds for the win.
Al Johnson, running hot as a firecracker, literally ran away
with the 50-lap “Stars & Stripes Classic” at Santa Fe Speedway in Willow
Springs, Ill., on July 2. Johnson, of Justice, Ill., celebrated his birthday in
style, taking the lead on the fifth lap then pulling away for the win. Tony
Izzo of Bridgeview, Ill., used the pole position to his advantage and took the
early lead, but Johnson, charging from the inside second row, blew by Izzo on
the high side coming out of turn two to take the lead. Jim O’Conner of
Kankakee, Ill., would take second, Bob Pohlman of Worth, Ill., third, Denny
Falkos of Aurora, Ill., in fourth, and Larry Jackson of Lyons, Ill., in fifth.
Dick Trickle was crowned he overall champion of the two-day,
two-track ARTGO-sanctioned “Summer Nationals” by virtue of his two victories in
twin 50-lap features at Wisconsin International Raceway in Kaukauna, Wis., on
July 4. Trickle nailed down a third-place finish in the 100-lap contest the
previous night at Capital Super Speedway in Oregon, Wis., on July 3. Jim Sauter
of Necedah, Wis., who won the 100-lapper at Capital, swept both the 50-lap
features at Kaukauna but after the second feature, Sauter’s car was found to
have an oversized engine, thus giving both feature wins to runner-up Trickle. Sauter
was dropped back to 12th place in the first feature and 11th
in the second main.
Steve Kinser of Bloomington, Ind., showed little mercy for
his fellow World of Outlaw competitors as he claimed his 11th series
win of the season by topping the field in the 30-lap main at Black Hills
Speedway in Rapid City, S.D. on July 4. Kinser pushed his Valvoline #11 around
Sammy Swindell on lap 17 and went on to post a six car-length victory on the
half-mile clay oval.
Edward “Ebby” Schallau, a former Eastern Iowa racing
promoter, died Wednesday, July 6, at the age of 77. Schallau was a founding
member and former president of the Cedar Valley Stock Car Racing Association.
Starting in the early 50’s, he promoted races in Cedar Rapids, Independence,
Monticello and Vinton.
They were on their feet at Knoxville (Iowa) Raceway on July
9 as the seventh annual “Twin 16’s” produced some of the finest racing all
year. The popular event saw T.J. Giddings of Kansas City and Tim Green of
Carmichael, Calif., split wins in the doubleheader. Giddings won the first feature handily after
Randy Smith of Norwalk and Green tangled going for the lead. After the restart,
Smith and Green would work their way from the back of the pack to finish second
and third. With the field reversed for the second feature, Green and Smith
again made their way to the front with Green in fourth place at the end of lap
one and grabbing the lead on lap six with Smith on his tail. Smith would
eventually fade as Green picked up his 13th career win at the famed
half-mile.
Tom Bartholomew of Waterloo, Iowa, was the winner of the
NASCAR Winston Racing 50-lap late model feature at the Dubuque County (Iowa)
Fairgrounds on Sunday, July 10. The 32-year-old, 15-year veteran took the lead
on lap 23 when race leader Gary Tigges of Durango, Iowa, suffered a flat tire
and was forced to the pit area.
Bartholomew ran untouched the rest of the way and won by a comfortable
margin. Roger Dolan of Lisbon, Iowa, was second, Ed Sanger of Waterloo, Iowa,
came in third, Rick Wendling of Hazelton, Iowa, fourth and Curt Martin of
Independence, Iowa, who led the first 11 laps, finished fifth.
After being plagued by an abundance of bad luck in 12
previous career Wisconsin State Fair Park Speedway starts, Alan Kulwicki found
13 to be his lucky number as he edged Michigan’s Bob Senneker to score his
initial win at the track in the ASA-sanctioned “Miller High Life 200” event in
West Allis, Wis., on July 10. Kulwicki’s turn came as he wheeled his Firebird
around Senneker to take the lead shortly after a restart on lap 179 and then
held off Senneker to take the victory by a car-length.
Gary Webb of Davenport, Iowa, and Dave Birkhofer of
Muscatine, Iowa, in their first appearance at Hawkeye Raceway for 1983, kept
the crowd on their feet as the two hot shoes dueled back and forth in the “Pabst
Blue Ribbon Late Model Special” in Bluegrass, Iowa, on July 12. Webb and
Birkhofer both started on the front row, with Webb taking the lead at the drop
of the green and Birkhofer giving chase. That chase would continue for the full
50 laps as the two veterans raced side-by-side and nose to tail throughout the
contest. Despite several last lap attempts from Birkhofer to unseat Webb from
the top spot, Webb would hold by a car length to take the exciting win. Jim Sandusky of Coal Valley, IL, took third
while Bruce Hanford of Davenport grabbed fourth.
Joe Kosiski of Omaha won the annual “Gopher 50” outlaw late
model special on Tuesday night, July 12, at the Steele County Fairgrounds in
Owatonna, Minn. Kosiski led wire-to-wire in the 50-lapper, but both he and
fifth place finisher Billy Moyer Jr. of Des Moines failed to make the minimum
weight requirement. Both Kosiski and Moyer
ran across the scales twice more and Kosiski’s third attempt showed that he was
five pounds over the minimum and he kept his first place finish. Moyer,
however, was disqualified from fifth. Chasing Kosiski across the finish line
was Bob Shryock of Estherville, Iowa, Pete Parker of Kaukauna, Wis., Ron Droog
of Aberdeen, S.D., and Will Kraft of Lakefield, Minn.
Surging from his inside row starting berth, Steve Kinser led
wire-to-wire in notching his 13th World of Outlaws sprint car main
event victory of the season at Cedar Lake Speedway in New Richmond, Wis., on
July 11. Promoted by Nationals Speedways, the program drew a near capacity
crowd to the first sprint car show since 1965 to be held at the northern
Wisconsin speed bowl.
Dick Trickle continued his hot streak in ARTGO late model
racing as he was the victor in the sixth annual “All-Star 100” at Rockford
(Ill.) Speedway on Tuesday, July 12. Trickle recorded his tenth
ARTGO-sanctioned win of the ’83 season, which established a new series’ record.
Taking the checkered flag after 100 circuits, Trickle had a 2.45 second lead
over runner-up Mark Martin of Charlotte, N.C. Jim Sauter of Necedah, Wis., took
third, Joe Shear of Beloit, Wis., fourth and Steve Burgess of Eau Claire, Wis.,
fifth.
Rich Vogler scored his second clean sweep of a USAC midget
show at Kokomo (Ind.) Speedway on July 13. Vogler set fast time with a 17
second tour of the quarter-mile, won the first heat and the 40-lap feature.
Rick Egersdorf of St. Paul, Minn., was the winner of the 21st
annual “Late Model Open” at Tri-State Speedway in Superior, Wis., on July 14.
Egersdorf took the lead from Ron Schreiner of Eleva, Wis., on lap 12 and led
the remaining 38 circuits of the 50-lap feature. Rick Popovich of Duluth,
Minn., finished in second place, Schreiner took third, Leon Plank of Eau
Claire, Wis., fourth, and Steve Laursen of Comstock, Wis., fifth.
Randy Smith of Norwalk, Iowa, behind the wheel of the
McCarl/Jensen #55, easily took his third National Speedways Contest Association
(NSCA) feature win of the season at the Henry County Fair in Mt. Pleasant,
Iowa, on Friday, July 15. Smith was the third driver to lead the 25-lap finale.
Galen Martin, a favorite of many of the grandstand full of fair goers, led the
first three laps before relinquishing the top spot to Australian Brett Lacey.
Lacey built a substantial lead in the Trostle
#20 before losing power on lap eight, allowing Smith to inherit the lead
and eventually score the win. Bill Robison, T.J. Giddings, John McCoy and Galen
Martin would follow Smith across the finish line.
Tom Helfrich of Haubstadt, Ind., posted his first National
Dirt Racing Associations (NDRA) late model victory in more than two years as he
won the “Stroh’s/Dodge National 100” at I-70 Speedway in Odessa, Mo., on July
16. Helfrich took the lead on the 76th lap from Rodney Combs of Lost
Creek, W.Va., when Combs’ car developed trouble and was never headed the rest
of the way. Helfrich cashed in $20,000 out of the $100,000 plus purse for the
three-day event. Morning Sun, Iowa’s Johnny Johnson ran a steady race and
finished second. Pennsylvania’s Kenny Brightbill took third followed by Kevin
Gundaker of St. Louis and Bill Martin of Council Bluffs, Iowa.
Dick Trickle turned in another fine driving performance in
ARTGO late model competition as he made off with the “Escape to Wisconsin 100”
at Dells Motor Speedway in the Wisconsin Dells on July 16. Trickle captured 11th ARTGO feature win of the season, leading all 100 laps in a dominant show. Steve
Holzhausen of Bangor, Wis., turned in his best ARTGO performance ever,
finishing second.
Dick Trickle survived a four-car battle with Tom Reffner,
Joe Shear and Jim Sauter to win the second leg of the Red, White and Blue State
Championship Series for late models at Wisconsin International Raceway in
Kaukauna, Wis., on Sunday, July 17. A crowd of 4,652 sat through a hot, humid
afternoon to witness Trickle’s 34th feature win of 1983 on raceways
throughout the nation. Trickle grabbed the lead on lap 52 of the 70-circuit
event when Sauter slid high coming out of the fourth turn on the half-mile
paved oval.
Ed Sanger of Waterloo, Iowa, won the 50-lap late model main
event during the Boone (Iowa) Speedway “Grand Nationals XVII” on July 20.
Sanger inherited the lead on lap 48 when race leader Roger Dolan was forced to
pit for a flat tire. Sanger was followed to the checkers by Tom Bartholomew of
Waterloo, Denny Osborn of Cedar Falls, Iowa, and Dick Schiltz of Waterloo.
Not even a one-day rain delay could prevent Dick Trickle
from scoring his 35th feature victory of the season in the 166-lap
main event which concluded Slinger (Wis.) Super Speedway’s “Summer Nationals”
on July 20. The triumph gave Trickle the overall title in the two-even series,
and was the second straight “Slinger Nationals” crown for Trickle, making him
the first two-time winner in the four-year history of the series. Trickle
earned more than $6,000 in posted awards and contingency money.
Steve Kinser continued his winning ways as he won the big
All Star Circuit of Champions sprint car finale at Eldora Speedway in Rossburg,
Ohio, on July 23. Kinser took the lead from Jack Hewitt on lap 17 and held on
from there to pocket the $22,000 winners share. Hewitt, Sammy Swindell, Bobby
Davis Jr., and Dave Blaney rounded out the top five.
Racing’s lucky horseshoe fell into Frank Gawlinski’s pocket
as the Lynwood, Ill., driver capitalized on race leader’s Butch Miller’s
misfortune and went on to win ARTGO Racing’s “Molenaar Classic 100” at Illiana
Motor Speedway in Schererville, Ind., on July 26. Miller had led for the first
84 circuits with Gawlinski trying to keep up when the Lawton, Mich., driver’s
bubble burst. Attempting to lap a slower Jay Sauter on the outside, the two
would tangle, sending both cars spinning into the infield. According to ARTGO
rules, Miller was sent to the back, giving Gawlinski the lead. Gawlinski,
despite driving on only seven cylinders, would have a seven car-length lead
over Tom Reffner of Rudolph, Wis., at the finish.
Leon Plank of Mondovi, Wis., would take the lead, lose it,
and then regain it again in the outlaw late model “Thunderbird Open” at Dodge
County Speedway in Kasson, Minn., on July 27. Plank would get out to a fast
lead in the 50-lapper, lose it to Joe Kosiski for 13 circuits and then regain
the top spot for good to take the $1,500 top prize. Plank added another $440 in
lap money to bring his total earnings to close to $2,000. Les Duellman of
Fountain City, Wis., would earn runner-up honors while Ron Schreiner of Eleva,
Wis., Bob Shryock of Estherville, Iowa, and Denny Anderson of Dodge Center,
Iowa, rounded out the top five.
Sammy Swindell, driving the Old Milwaukee #1, picked up
where he left off at the April World of Outlaws show at Knoxville (Iowa) Raceway
and ran away with the $3,000 to win feature on Wednesday, July 27. In what was
considered a warm-up for the upcoming “Knoxville Nationals”, Swindell grabbed
the lead at the drop of the green and powered away from the rest of the field
in the 25-lap contest. Ron Shuman of Mesa, Ariz., took second, Steve Kinser
third, Doug Wolfgang fourth, and Shane Carson of Oklahoma City fifth.
It was anything but a start to finish win for Doug Wolfgang
as he won the 20-lap World of Outlaws feature at Santa Fe Speedway in Willow
Springs, Ill., on July 28. Wolfgang barely qualified for the feature after
finishing fifth in his heat, but because he set the fifth fastest time in time
trials, he started on the outside of the front row. He would take the lead from
the start and although Ron Shuman challenged him early in the contest, he would
never relinquish the top spot. Steve Kinser would pass Shuman for runner-up
honors while Shuman would settle for third.
Doug Wolfgang of Sioux Falls, S.D., made his first visit to
Wilmot (Wis.) Speedway on July 30 and made it a memorable one, winning the top
money in the second round of the “J & L Gas-Wilmot Winged Open Sprint
Series”. Wolfgang’s win came after first round winner Rick Ferkel lost the
steering in his sprinter after leading for the first 37 laps. Wolfgang
inherited the point and led the last three laps to claim the win. Gib Wiser of
Neosha, Wis., took second followed by Jimmy Sills of Sacramento, Calif.
With a $1,000 bounty on his head, Dick Trickle bested the
bounty hunters and went on to win the ARTGO-sanctioned “Dixieland Challenge
100” at Wisconsin International Raceway in Kaukauna, Wis., n July 2. A crowd of
8,145, the largest ever to witness an ARTGO Racing event in Wisconsin, saw the
amazing 41-year-old driver come from last place in the 24-car starting field to
score his 12th ARTGO feature win of the season. Trickle agreed to
start in the rear of the field, but if he won the race, he would pick up an
additional $1,000 if he won. Trickle took the lead from NASCAR star Mark Martin
on lap 64 and was never headed after that.
Whitey Harris of Lake Villa, Ill., topped a field of 21 late
models, including NASCAR’s Darrell Waltrip and Mark Martin, to win the
“Dixieland Challenge” at Santa Fe Speedway in Willow Springs, Ill., on
Thursday, August 4. Harris, the night’s second fastest qualifier, took the lead
at the start and never looked back, as he led from start to finish.
Charlie Sentman, the racing auctioneer from Waveland, Ind.,
won the 20-lap late model feature at the Knox County Fair in Knoxville, Ill.,
on August 5. His win, before a sellout crowd, came after a mid-race battle with
Greg Babb of Decatur, Ill. Both Sentman and Babb were heat winners on the well
prepared half-mile.
Gary Lynch, who hails from Salem, Ore., got hooked up and
went all the way to win the “Eldora Nationals” at Eldora Speedway in Rossburg,
Ohio, on Saturday night, August 6. Lynch, who was the fourth fastest qualifier,
took the lead from Jimmy Sills on lap four and ran untouched for the biggest win
of his career. Lee Osborne, who won Friday night’s All Star Circuit of
Champions feature, took second behind Lynch. Jimmy Sills, Tim Green and Jac
Haudenschild rounded out the top five.
The flight of the “Bluebird” was unerring as Bob Senneker of
Dorr, Mich., won the ASA-sanctioned “Redbud 400” at Anderson (Ind.) Speedway by
.6 of a second over Rusty Wallace before a record crowd of 11,232 on August 6.
In his patented style, Senneker measured the front-runners for the first half
of the race then applied pressure late, benefitting from a break of
concentration from Wallace on lap 366 to take the lead. At the finish,
Senneker, Wallace and Dick Trickle would be the only drivers on the lead lap in
a night of grinding attrition.
The Busch Racing Series saw two different winners at two
different tracks as Ray Guss Sr. of Milan, Ill., earned a hard-fought win at
his hometown track of East Moline (Ill.) Speedway on August 9 while Gary Webb
of Davenport, Iowa, won the 50-lap late model showdown at Quincy (Ill.)
Raceways on August 11.
Sammy Swindell of Bartlett, Tenn., broke his Knoxville jinx
to claim the 23rd annual “Knoxville Nationals” at Knoxville (Iowa)
Raceway on August 13. The 27-year-old assumed the lead after mechanical woes
stopped Steve Kinser’s charge to his fourth consecutive title. Swindell, who
pocketed $15,000 for the victory, won by a half straightaway over Doug Wolfgang
and Ron Shuman. Steve Kinser would win
the Wednesday night opener while Bobby Allen of Hanover, Pa., too Thursday
night’s qualifier. Swindell would win the Race of States and Rick Ungar took
the Mystery feature on Friday night.
Dick Trickle chalked up his sixth State Championship late
model title at the Wisconsin International Raceway in Kaukauna, Wis., on Sunday
afternoon August 13. The crafty Wisconsin Rapids, Wis., veteran flew by Ton
Reffner of Rudolph, Wis., on lap 33 and won by five car-lengths at the finish
of the 80-lap feature of the third and final round of the “Red, White and Blue
State Championship Series”. Trickle totaled 3,695 points to win the three-race
series. He was followed by Tom Reffner with 2,695 markers and Jim Sauter with
1,670.
Omaha’s Joe Kosiski had led the 100-mile late model event on
the one-mile track at the Missouri State Fairgrounds in Sedalia each of the
last four years, but had never won it. It was a different story this year as
Kosiski breezed to an easy victory on Saturday afternoon, August 13. Billy
Moyer Jr. of Des Moines led the first 32 laps before being passed by Kosiski on
the inside of the front stretch. All leaders pitted on lap 36 and Shorty Acker
led until lap 61 when he was overtaken by Kosiski. Acker took the lead again on
lap 81 but lost it for good to Kosiski five laps later. Bo Smith of St.
Charles, Mo., would finish second while Mark Keltner of Morning Sun, Iowa, took
third. Acker would run out of gas on lap 97 and scramble to finish fourth.
Doug Wolfgang of Sioux Falls, S.D., passed Bobby Davis Jr.
of Memphis, Tenn., with just four laps remaining to win the 30-lap National
Speedways Contest Association winged sprint car feature before a near-capacity
crowd at the Iowa State Fair on Sunday afternoon, August 14. Wolfgang passed
Davis going into the third turn on lap 26 and then opened up a comfortable
margin for the last few laps. Davis would settle for second while Cliff
Woodward of Kearney, Mo., took third. Richard Lupo of Hanover, Pa., earned
fourth and Tim Green of Carmichael, Calif., finished fifth.
Just as “lady luck” was not too kind to Billy Moyer Jr. in
Saturday’s 100-mile race at the Missouri State Fairgrounds, she smiled on him
Sunday, August 14, as he won the 25-lap feature on the half-mile track. Moyer
was in front all 25 laps and never challenged as the race for second place
heated up behind him. Ed Dixon of Washington, Ill. and Kevin Gundaker of
Batesville, Ark., put on a bumper to bumper battle for 22 laps before Dixon was
able to prevail.
Ron Shuman withstood a mid-race challenge from Steve Kinser
and went on to record his second World of Outlaws win of the season at Santa Fe
Speedway in Willow Springs, Ill., on August 16. Shuman pushed his sprint car
around Santa Fe’s longer oval and led all 30 laps to collect $6,525 for the
victory. Kinser’s chance for victory came to a halt when he spun his car on lap
17. Sammy Swindell and Doug Wolfgang followed Shuman to the finish line.
Two-time ARTGO Racing champion Tom Reffner of Rudolph, Wis.,
captured ARTGO’s ninth annual “Wayne Carter Classic” at Grundy County Speedway
in Morris, Ill., on August 16. The 42-year-old speedster held off Dick Trickle
at the three-quarters mark of the 100-lapper and won by a straightaway at the
finish for his first ARTGO win of the season.
Pete Parker led all 50 laps in winning the 11th
annual “Silver 1000” at Proctor (Minn.) Speedway on August 17. Parker grabbed
the front-running position on the opening lap and never relinquished it
throughout the event. Jim Bruggeman of White Bear Lake, Minn., took runner-up
honors, Rick Popovich of Duluth, Minn., was third, Ed Sanger of Waterloo, Iowa,
fourth and Tom Nesbitt of Thunder Bay, Ontario, fifth.
As the heat of the summer kept breaking records, so did Gary
Webb. The Davenport, Iowa, driver won his record 16th straight late
model feature at East Moline (Ill.) Speedway on Friday, August 19. Following in
Webb’s footsteps was Jeff Marburger of Sabula, Iowa. Marburger scored his 13th win of the season in the street stock division at East Moline as well.
Gary Bettenhausen overcame 101-degree temperatures to score
a wire-to-wire victory in the “Tony Bettenhausen Memorial” 100-mile USAC Sliver
Crown event at the Illinois State Fairgrounds in Springfield, Ill., on August
20. Bettenhausen finished three seconds ahead of runner-up Ron Shuman. Ken Schrader,
Larry Rice and George Snider rounded out the top five finishers.
Rocky Hodges of Des Moines, Iowa, waited until just two laps
from the end of the race then shifted into high gear to win the championship
feature race of the fifth annual “Jackson Nationals” at VFW Speedway in
Jackson, Minn., on August 20. Hodges trailed Danny Smith of Hendersonville,
Tenn., for most of the feature race but with a lap and a half to go, made a
high pass work coming out of turn four as the white flag waved. Hodges would take
the checkers by two car lengths and collect $7,500 for the exciting win.
Dean Roper scored his third straight USAC stock car victory
in Sunday afternoon’s “Allen Crowe Memorial” at the Illinois State Fairgrounds
in Springfield, Ill., on August 21. Roper,
driving a Pontiac Grand Prix, took the lead from Terry Pearson on lap 39 and
went on to beat runner-up Bob Brevak to the finish by three seconds. Joe Wallace finished third, Butch Garner
fourth and Tom Meinberg fifth.
Mike Schulte of Norway, Iowa, posted the biggest win of his
career, winning the IMCA “Modified Nationals” at the Benton County Fairgrounds
in Vinton, Iowa, on August 21. The victory in the 100-lapper was worth $1,000
of the estimated $10,000 purse. Jack Mitchell of Cedar Falls, Iowa, paced the
38-car field for the first 27 laps of the race until Mike Krall of Waterloo
took over the top spot. Krall would start slowing on lap 42 and Schulte would
make the winning pass a lap later. He was chased by Mitchell the rest of the
way. Merv Chandler of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, would finish third.
Kenny Schrader won the 75-lap USAC midget auto race at
Godfrey (Ill.) Speedway on August 26. Schrader, who started 15th,
took advantage of other driver’s mechanical issues and accidents to snare the
lead on lap 26 and win by a comfortable margin. Arnie Knepper, Warren Mockler,
Rich Vogler, and Mel Kenyon would all have the lead at the beginning of the
race only to drop out.
Two-time USAC sprint car national champion Sheldon Kinser
reentered the world of winged sprint car racing and enjoyed a $2,300 victory in
the final leg of the “J & L Gas-Wilmot Winged Open Sprint Series” at Wilmot
(Wis.) Speedway on August 27. It was the first time in 10 years that Kinser had
wheeled a winged sprint car. Kinser would start on the outside front row and
lead wire to wire in the 40-lapper, but spent the final 19 laps fighting off
fast qualifier (15.09) Jim Moulis on the 1/3-mile oval. Rick Ferkel, despite
being absent from the final series race, wound up the overall points winner.
Despite having to drive the final 134 laps in fourth gear,
Dave Weltmeyer scored the biggest win of his career in the USAC/ARCA-sanctioned
“Milwaukee Sentinel 200” at Wisconsin State Fair Park Speedway in West Allis on
Sunday, August 28. Weltmeyer took the lead from Bill Venturini on the 163rd
trip around the famous paved mile then survived a pair of restarts to cross the
finish line 5.6 seconds ahead of Venturini to pick up the victory. Bobby Dotter
came in third and was followed by Davey Allison and Ken Kotowicz.
Despite not winning one of the 10 feature races, Herb
Shannon of Peoria, Ill., won the overall championship in the “Busch Late Model
Series”, taking the title by 32 markers over Denny Falkos of Chicago, Ill.
Shannon had consistently high finishes and never finished worse than fifth,
averaging 21.6 out of a possible 30 points each night of racing. Racing took
place in Granite City, Ill., Charleston, Ill., Peoria, Ill., Princeton, Ill.,
Mendota, Ill., East Moline, Ill., Quincy, Ill., and Willow Springs, Ill.,
“Injun” Joe Merryfield came out of retirement briefly to
take the 40-lap “Grand Finale” invitational at Adams County Speedway in
Corning, Iowa, on September 3. Merryfield, who hadn’t race for nearly two
years, was behind the wheel of a car prepared by his friend Jim Wilson of Des
Moines. Tony Stewart of Washington, Iowa, led he first 27 laps before lapped
traffic allowed Merryfield to pass him on lap 28. He would run untouched the
remaining 12 circuits. Stewart would settle for second, Kenny Walton of Viola,
Iowa, would take third, Glenn Robey of Omaha, would grab fourth and Kenny Fenn
of Washington, Iowa, would earn fifth.
Ken Schrader overpowered Rich Vogler to claim the 100-lap
USAC national midget feature at Belleville, Ill., on September 3. Vogler took
command of the feature at the halfway point with Schrader close behind.
Schrader squeezed into the lead on lap 61 and fought off Vogler the final 39
laps to take the win. Vogler would drop out on lap 97 with driveline issues.
Ken Nichols, Tom Bigelow, Mel Kenyon, and Kevin Doty would follow Schrader
across the finish line.
Rick Hood led all the way to capture the USAC sprint car 30-lap
feature at Tri-State Speedway in Haubstadt, Ind., on September 4. Hood,
starting on the pole, took the lead at the drop of the green and raced to a
relatively easy victory. Larry Rice, Mike Johnson, Ken Schrader, and Rich
Vogler followed behind Hood.
Dean Roper cashed in on an early race misfortune and went on
to win the 100-mile USAC/ARCA sanctioned stock car race at the Du Quoin (Ill.)
State Fairgrounds on September 4. The win was Roper’s fourth of the year and
clinched the club’s stock car championship. Waiting patiently while other
drivers either crashed or overheated in the 100-degree temperatures, Roper took
the lead on lap 68 when most of the frontrunners made their mandatory pit stop.
He would cruise the last 32 miles to score the win. Butch Garner, Tom Meinberg,
Joe Wallace, and Rick O’Brien rounded out the top five.
Kevin Olson beat Don Tyler by a scant two feet to win the
50-lap feature at the second annual “Pepsi Midget Nationals” during the
season-ending Badger Midge Racing Association program at Angell Park Speedway
in Sun Prairie, Wis., on September 4. Olson, who collected $2,000 from the purse
of $10,000, led only four laps of the contest as the capacity crowd was treated
to a close, exciting race.
Tony Izzo of Bridgeview, Ill., notched his fifth victory of
the season as he topped the 100-lap Prairie State Stock Car Classic” at Santa
Fe Speedway in Willow Springs, Ill., on September 4. Izzo, the fastest
qualifier, jumped into the lead on the opening lap and never relinquished it,
although he was challenged early on by Jim O’Conner and Arnie Gardner. By
lap38, both O’Conner and Gardner had dropped out and Izzo opened up a big
cushion on his way to victory. Ken Pohlman of Worth, Ill., took runner-up
honors and Errol Van Allen of LaGrange, Ill., grabbed third.
Sammy Swindell outran Steve Kinser to win the World of
Outlaws’ “Skoal Bandits Shootout” at I-70 Speedway in Odessa, Mo., on September
4. Kinser would lead the opening 22 circuits of the 30-lapper on the half-mile,
high-banked clay oval, but a red flag period on lap 23 allowed Swindell to make
some adjustments on his sprint car and on the restart he took command and
charged to the $10,550 triumph. Kinser would hang on for second followed by Ron
Shuman, Danny Smith, and Scott Ritchhart.
Bob Pierce led all the way to claim the 100-lap”Northern
Illinois Clay Track Championship” at Kankakee (Ill.) Fairgrounds Speedway on
September 5. Pierce raced ahead of season champion Cloyce Friend at the drop of
the green and threaded his way through slower traffic on the quarter-mile
track. Pierce eventually lapped every car except second place finisher Dick Potts.
Friend, John Provenzano and Tom Rients rounded out the top five.
Jim Sauter led the entire 300 laps to win the ASA-sanctioned
300-lapper at the Minnesota State Fair Speedway in Falcon Heights on Monday, September
5. Despite his awesome display of power in the race, Sauter barely finished two
car lengths ahead of runner-up Mike Eddy in the 300-lap contest. Eddy kept a
similar margin over third place finisher Dick Trickle. Sauter earned $12,050
out of a posted $92,000 purse for the three-day program, also winning a 125-lap
qualifying feature on Saturday and a 75-lap contest on Sunday afternoon.
An exciting side-by-side finish wasn’t the end of it at the
“Hawkeyeland Street Stock Championships” at the Muscatine County Fairgrounds in
West Liberty, Iowa, on September 5. Gus Hughes of Monticello, Iowa, won the
A-main but gave up his victory to Rod Smith of Monmouth, Ill. Fifty-eight cars
vied for 24 starting positions with Hughes taking the early lead. Smith would
take over several laps later and open up a comfortable lead. With only a few
circuits left in the 25-lapper, Smith found himself with a 10-car length lead
but that shrunk dramatically as he encountered heavy lapped traffic, allowing
Hughes to shorten the gap. On the final lap, Hughes sling-shot his way around
Smith coming through the final turns and won by half a car length at the
finish. After the race, though, Hughes refused to sell his engine for the $750
claim, thus forfeiting the $500 top prize to Smith.
Gary Bettenhausen won the 100-lap USAC Silver Crown Series
event at the Du Quoin (Ill.) State Fairgrounds on Monday, September 5. Ron
Shuman would lead the first 13 laps on the mile dirt oval before Bettenhausen
took command. Sheldon Kinser, who started 19th, took over the top
spot on lap 43 but that would only last until the 51st circuit when
Bettenhausen regained the top spot for good. Bettenhausen would set the pace to
the checkers with Chuck Gurney taking second, Ken Schrader third, George Snider
fourth and Bill Engelhart fifth.
Vern Weber and Dr. Jack Hunt, co-promoters of Greater Iowa
Racing, Inc., announced they had sold the corporation to Jerry Blue of West
Union, Iowa, on September 8. The sale ended their 19-year affiliation at the
Buchanan County Fairgrounds in Independence, Iowa. Weber stated the high cost
of racing had turned him off the sport. Weber had been connected with racing
for 34 years; first as a driver and then on the promotional end.
Chuck Gurney outdistanced Sheldon Kinser to top the USAC
Sliver Crown Series’ “Hoosier Hundred” at the Indiana State Fairgrounds in
Indianapolis on September 10. Gurney would duck under Ken Schrader on lap 10 of
the 100-mile event and then build up a half-lap lead to win the event for the
second straight year. Kinser, Larry Rice, Kramer Williamson and Johnny Parsons
followed.
Jim Back of Vesper, Wis., beat Dick Trickle by two-car
lengths in the 75-lap feature to close out the “Budweiser 500” weekend at Wisconsin
International Raceway in Kaukauna, Wis., on September 11. Trickle, who had won
five times in five attempts at WIR for the season, sliced into Back’s big lead
late in the race, but Back held off the late charge before a crowd of 4,488. Terry Baldry, Ted Musgrave and Alan Kulwicki
followed Back and Trickle to the finish line.
Ed Sanger of Waterloo, Iowa, edged around Roger Dolan of
Lisbon, Iowa, on the very last lap to win the 50-lap NASCAR Grand American late
model feature during the “Winston Fall Special” at Boone (Iowa) Speedway on
September 11. Greg Roorda of Mitchellville, Iowa, won the sportsman main, Terry
Hirst of Rock Island, Ill., took IMCA modified honors and Lloyd Henderson of
Granger, Iowa, score the thunder car victory.
Exhibiting the brute force of his C.J. Rayburn outlaw late
model, 24-year-old Jeff Purvis of Clarksville, Tenn., flashed into the lead on
lap 86 and cruised to an easy victory over Pat Patrick to win the 13th
annual “World 100” at Eldora Speedway in Rossburg, Ohio, on September 11.
Purvis, the sentimental favorite, dogged Patrick for the event’s initial 85
laps on Earl Baltes’ half-mile, clay oval before pulling off the winning move
worth $16,000. Patrick would settle for second while Jack Boggs, Freddie Smith
and Donnie Moran rounded out the top five.
Rich Vogler became the first three-time winner in the
31-year history of the “Hut Hundred” USAC midget event at the Terre Haute
(Ind.) Action Track on September 11. Vogler, who had won previously in 1978 and
1980, finished 10-car lengths ahead of runner-up Stan Fox, but had to fight off
challenges from both Fox and Larry Rice in the late stages of the race.
Before 5,000 race fans, Ed Sanger of Waterloo, Iowa, passed
Roger Dolan of Lisbon, Iowa, on the 89th lap an posted an impressive
victory in the sixth annual “Yankee Dirt Track Classic” at Hawkeye Downs
Speedway in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on September 17. It was Sanger’s first victory
at the half-mile since 1979 and bought him$3,500 of the record $27,000 purse.
Leon Plank of Mondovi, Wis., would lead for the first 34 laps before Sanger
took over. Dolan would slip by Sanger on lap 69, but Sanger would return the
favor on lap 89 and hold steady for the last 11 laps to take the win. Plank,
Tom Bartholomew of Waterloo, and Ken Walton of Viola, Iowa, rounded out the top
five finishers.
Paul Shafer of Highland, Ind., tangled with Dick Potts on
the last turn of the last lap but slid backwards across the finish line to
score a one-foot victory in the “Hoosier Clay Championships” at Rensselaer
(Ind.) Speedway on September 18.
Jim Back nailed down two firsts and a fifth place finish in
50-lap features to capture the overall title in the two-day, ARTGO-sanctioned,
12th annual “Midwest
Championships” at Dell Motor Speedway in Wisconsin Dells on September 18. Back, looking for his first-ever ARTGO Racing
win, ended the wait in Saturday’s 50-lapper, grabbing the lead on lap three and
going on to take the checkered flag. In Sunday night’s 50-lap finale, Back
would pass Al Schill on the high side of the track on lap 35 and maintain a
half straightaway lead from there.
Joe Kosiski of Omaha, Neb., would cash in $1,200 for winning
the “Tri-State Spectacular” at Tri-State Speedway in Fort Smith, Ark., on
September 24. Kosiski would pass Rick Beebe of Overland, Kan., on lap eight of
the 30-lap feature and win handily. The race was for second place as Beebe,
Billy Moyer Jr. Des Moines, Iowa, and Doug Ingalls of Tyler, Tex., dueled for
20 laps. Ingalls would get the best of the battle with Moyer finishing third,
Skip Thompson of Mountain Grove, Mo., in fourth and Beebe in fifth.
Racing vagabond Kenny Schrader captured his first career
USAC Silver Crown feature to highlight the third annual “Four-Crown Nationals”
at Eldora Speedway in Rossburg, Ohio, on September 24. In companion feature
events, Jack Hewitt led from start to finish to take the 30-lap USAC sprint car
main; Johnny Parsons took the 20-lap USAC midget finale and Bobby Jacks claimed
the 30-lap USAC stock car headliner.
Willy Kraft of Lakefield, Minn., remained the hottest driver
in north central Iowa and southern Minnesota as he captured the outlaw late
model feature during the eighth annual “All Star Spectacular” at Fairmont
(Minn.) Speedway on September 24. Kraft and Bob Shryock of Estherville, Iowa,
would battle side-by-side and bumper to bumper before Kraft was finally able to
prevail and collect the $1,500 first prize. Shryock would settle for second
followed by Jerry Holtkamp of Williams, Iowa, Bruce Busho of Owatonna, Minn.,
and Mike Smith of Ellsworth, Iowa.
Joe Shear of Beloit, Wis., grabbed the lead on the 40th
circuit and outran Tom Reffner and Dick Trickle to capture the “National Short
Track Championship” 200-lap super late model feature on September 25. It was
Shear’s record fifth win in the 18th running of the event. Shear, who started sixth in the event, moved
past Steve Murgic of Rosemount, Minn., on lap 40 and then for the remainder of
the race, fought off Reffner and Trickle. The three cars raced in a tight
formation until the checkered fell with Shear maintaining a slight edge over
Reffner. Trickle too third ahead of Ted Musgrave, Alan Kulwicki and Murgic.
Don Hoffman and Randy Smith of Des Moines, Iowa, Gene
Claxton of Kansas City, and Steve Knepper of Belleville, Ill., were winners at
the “4-Crown Nationals” at I-70 National Speedway in Odessa, Mo., on October 1.
Hoffman would run away from the field in late model 30-lapper, leading the
entire distance and lapping the field. Smith would take over the lead on lap
nine from T.J. Giddings of Kansas City to win the 30-lap sprint car main event.
Claxton took the lead from A.R. Wilkenson of Kansas City on the 13th
circuit of the sportsman 30-lapper and win handily. The 20-lap midget feature
was the most contested race of the evening as a father and son battle ensued
between Arnie and Steve Knepper of Belleville, Ill. Son finally overtook dad on
lap 15 and held him off by a nose at the finish.
Ed Hoffman of Bensenville, Ill., took the lead from John
Hollifield on the fourth circuit and led the rest of the way to win the 22nd
annual “Tony Bettenhausen Memorial 100” at Illiana Motor Speedway in
Schererville, Ind., on Sunday afternoon, October 2. Hoffman thus joined Frank
Gawlinski as the only driver to won both the Illiana point title and
Bettenhausen in the same year. Duane Pierson of Villa Park, Ill., took second,
with Dave Weltmeyer of Harvey, Ill., in third, Tom Cellini of Chicago Heights,
Ill., fourth and Burt Weitemeyer of Lansing, Ill., fifth.
Tom Reffner of Rudolph, Wis., won Sunday afternoon’s 100-lap
late model championship to wrap up his third “Oktoberfest 200” title in the 14th running of the event at La Crosse Interstate Speedway in West Salem, Wis., on
October 2. In addition to capturing the 100-lap main, Reffner won the first
50-lap qualifier and set fast time on Saturday afternoon and added a 10-lap
dash Saturday evening. Only a second place finish behind Jim Back in Saturday
night’s 25-lap Race of Champions feature prevented Reffner from a clean sweep.
Ever the master of the high-banked oval, Mike Eddy won the
ASA-sanctioned “Winchester 400” at Winchester (Ind.) Speedway on Sunday
afternoon, October 2. Eddy crossed the finish line four seconds ahead of
runner-up Butch Miller. Although the race featured 11 different lead changes,
Eddy dominated the bulk of the chase, leading 297 circuits. Eddy would pass
Miller on lap 386 to take the final lead of the day and go on to claim the
winner’s $10,000 share of the event’s $58,000 plus purse. Miller, Jim Sauter,
Terry Senneker, and Tom Jones would round out the top five.
Pete Parker of Kaukauna, Wis. (outlaw late model), Ken
Walton of Viola, Iowa (limited late model), Ron Jones of Zimmerman, Minn.
(sportsman) and Mike Schulte of Norway, Iowa (IMCA modified), were feature winners
at the annual “Fall Festival of Racing” at Mason City (Iowa) Speedway on
October 2. Parker got around Willy Kraft of Lakefield, Minn., on the last lap
to win the outlaw late model feature while Walton outraced Lynn Idler of Ionia,
Iowa, in the 25-lap limited late model main event. Ron Jones made it look easy
in capturing sportsman feature honors while Mike Schulte topped Jack Mitchell
of Cedar Falls, Iowa, not only for feature honors but the 1983 IMCA modified
national point’s title as well. There were a total of 207 cars competing in
four divisions during the weekend.
Ed Sanger of Waterloo, Iowa, moved past Roger Dolan of
Lisbon, Iowa, on lap 68 of the 100-lap NASCAR Grand American feature to win the
“Missouri Nationals” at Capital Speedway in Holts Summit, Mo., on October 1.
Sanger constantly pressure Dolan throughout the race before finally making the
winning pass. After getting the top spot, he would lap almost the whole field
except Dolan, Joe Merryfield of Des Moines and Tom Bartholomew of Waterloo.
Steve Fraise of Montrose, Iowa, wound up fifth, one lap down.
The 55-year reign of Wisconsin Auto Racing, Inc., as the
promotional body of Wisconsin State Fair Park Speedway in West Allis came to an
end on October 6 when the State Fair Board selected a group headed by Frank and
Dominic Giuffrie, operators of a crane business in nearby Oak Creek, Wis., to
conduct racing events at the paved mile for five years beginning in 1984.
Joe Kosiski demonstrated his mastery of the half-mile clay
oval, winning the “Fall Festival” at Lakeside Speedway in Kansas City on
October 8. Starting in the back of the field after blowing a head gasket in
qualifying, Kosiski began his assault on the field and by lap six was in third
place behind Iowans’ Don Hoffman and Johnny Johnson. Those three dueled back
and forth for 13 laps before Kosiski overtook them both for the lead on lap 19.
He was never headed for the remainder of the 40-lap event. Hoffman, Steve
Kosiski, Johnson and Doug Wiggs rounded out the top five. In other action, Bob
Kutzke captured the street stock feature and Gene Claxton was the limited late
model winner.
Aided by a win in the first of two 50-lap features, Rusty
Wallace emerged the overall winner of the two-day ARTGO Racing “Fall Nationals”
at Grundy County Speedway in Morris, Ill., on October 9. Wallace combined a first, second and fourth
place finish to clinch the crown. Dick Trickle captured the event’s opening
50-lap headliner and Frank Gawlinski took top honors in Sunday’s concluding
50-lapper.
Jim O’Conner of Kankakee, Ill., battled with Tony Izzo of
Bridgeview, Ill. and John Provenzano of Glen Ellyn, Ill., throughout most of
the race and emerged the winner of the rain-postponed “Old Style National 200”
at Santa Fe Speedway in Willow Springs, Ill., on Sunday, October 9. On the
start of the final 100 laps, all-out racing resumed between the three veterans,
going door to door with each other until their were 23 laps remaining and
O’Conner was finally able to break free to take possession of the top spot for
good. Provenzano, Izzo, Bob Pohlman of Oak Lawn, Ill., and Roger Dolan of
Lisbon, Iowa, rounded out the top five finishers.
Tom Reffner won the 83-lap late model feature and Marvin
Carmen of Union City, Ind., topped the 30-lap sprint car finale on Sunday,
October 9, to highlight the two-day “October Nationals” at Capital Super
Speedway in Oregon, Wis., on October 9. Jim McClean won the 25-lap Badger
Midget Auto Racing Association 25-lapper on Saturday.
With a crowd of 10,000 looking on, Bob Senneker crossed the
finish line five seconds ahead of Junior Hanley to win the ASA-sanctioned “Fall
Classic” at Indianapolis Raceway Park in Clermont, Ind., on October 16. With no
one driver dominating the race, it was anyone’s race to win. Senneker’s crew
put him in a good position as he beat all contenders out of the pits to take
the lead for good on lap 226. Senneker earned $5,865 from a purse of $43,650.
Hanley, Dick Trickle, Rusty Wallace and NASCAR’s Bobby Allison were the top
five finishers.
Sammy Swindell would capture his fourth sprint car feature win
of the year at Knoxville (Iowa) Raceway in the World of Outlaws’ 25-lap “Skoal
Bandits Shootout” on Sunday afternoon, October 16. Swindell’s $13,375 victory
in the $82,500 series’ finale was sprint car racing’s third richest purse. It
was also Swindell’s 17th World of Outlaws feature win of the season
and 82nd of his career. Ralph Capitani, Knoxville Raceway promoter
remarked afterwards that Swindell won over $39,000 at the track alone in 1983
John Mason of Millersburg, Ohio, and Doug Wolfgang of Sioux
Falls, S.D., were the big winners at the “U.S. Dirt Invitational Challenge” at
I-70 National Speedway in Odessa, Mo, on October 23. Mason would pass Charlie
Swartz of Ashland, Ky., with two laps left in the 40-lap main event to score
the $10,000 win. Larry Moore of Seneca, S.C., would also get by Swartz on the
same lap and applied pressure to Mason on the final lap with Mason winning by a
car-length at the checkers. Swartz, Noel Witcher of Greenwood, Ind., and Joe
Kosiski of Omaha would round out the top five. Wolfgang won the championship
sprint car feature after a spirited battle with Keith Kauffman of Mifflintown,
Pa., for the full 40 laps. After swapping the lead several times, Wolfgang got
past Kauffman on lap 37 and held on to collect the $10,000 first prize.
Kauffman, Jeff Swindell of Memphis, Tenn., Danny Smith of Des Moines and T.J.
Giddings of Kansas City were the top five finishers. Thirty-eight of the best
late model drivers and 40 of the best sprint car pilots were invited to the
$110,000 one-day event.