Cedar
Rapids, Iowa (June 24, 1973) - You’re probably aware that Irv Janey has not
raced one lap on the International Motor Contest Association stock car circuit
this year.
That
was not in the original plans for the Cedar
Rapids driver, who last year fulfilled a dream of his
and his late father Ed’s by winning the IMCA championship.
“Oh,
I was encouraged in the offseason when IMCA decided to guarantee the defending champion
(Janey) $200 in appearance money,” admitted Irv. “But the straw that broke the
camel’s back was when IMCA announced that the season opener at Shreveport (La. ) was a 200-lapper and paid only $500 to
win.
“That
took away all my enthusiasm. Shreveport is 500 miles from here!”
Janey
added that IMCA does not “have enough races booked to make it worthwhile, either.”
But he might enter the field for the Firecracker 300 at Des Moines the night of July
4. “I haven’t joined IMCA, yet, but if USAC doesn’t object I may race,” he
explained.
If
Janey doesn’t participate, it will mark the second time in as many years that
IMCA’s defending champion has not been on hand for the annual event which was
previously known as the Iowa
300. Ernie Derr didn’t compete last year. Derr, like Janey, is running the full
USAC slate this year.
Irv
still runs for Marty Sixt’s Advance Drainage Systems outfit out of Iowa City . While his USAC
mount is a 1973 Dodge Charger, he pilots a 1970 Plymouth in the weekly show at Hawkeye Downs
on Friday night. He's been less than impressive at the Downs .
“I
never seem to run well at home,” he said, “but we’re starting to get it
working. Actually, it is working okay – I’m just not fast enough. It’s taking
me more time to get competitive.”
Janey
isn’t sulking over his lack of success at the Downs .
To the contrary, he points to the keen competition and other known factors that
seem to plague non-Chevrolet drivers.
“If
you can run with these guys here (Downs ), it’s
like going to batting practice when you enter races at other tracks. It's really
good for you - it keeps you sharp.”
“But
the Chevrolets definitely have an advantage with more cubic inches in their
engines and less car weight. Even with the hemi engine (426 cubic inches), we
are smaller. Fred Horn has the same problem with his hemi Plymouth . The Chevys have more cubes and they
are 500-700 pounds lighter than our Plymouths.”
By
local Cam-Car rules, that is permissible, but USAC doesn’t allow it, Janey
explained.
“USAC
holds the cubes down and every car has to weigh 3,900 pounds. Either that or
you have to run a pony car with a small engine.”
“I
really don’t mind the local rule, though, and I don’t think I'll ever make the
switch to a Chevy. I don’t think it’s good for racing if everyone starts
running the same kind of car.”
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