Maggie also drives her 1960 Pontiac in the weekly Friday night stock car program at Hawkeye Downs here.
She has driven it so well, in fact, that she has won three of the six women's
races that have been held.
That's right . . . women's
races. Women drivers’ right out there on the track.
Mothers wearing helmets and
talking about spin-outs, roll bars and checkered flags. Maggie Andrews might be
changing diapers one minute and be in a shoulder harness on the straightaway
the next.
She is the mother of a
4-month-old daughter. “Lori was born at the end of February,” Maggie said, “and
I was racing May 16.”
In addition to the baby, she
has a 14-year-old son and stepsons who are 20 and 18. Mrs. Andrews, 34, said
about 10 women have been entering the Friday night
races here and nearly the same number drive each
Saturday night at Independence .
“We were racing at Waterloo
for a while, too,” said Maggie, who is the new president of the Midwest Women’s Racing Association, “but, due to a lack
of interest, we don't anymore.”
“We're not trying to get onto
any other tracks now. All we want to do is get interest built up here and in Independence .”
Maggie's husband, Charles, is
also a race driver and she credits him with getting her interested in the
track. And wouldn't you know it? The lady of the house has been the only winner
all season.
“I'm glad to see Maggie win,”
said Andrews. “We can use the money.”
At first, Maggie said, the
women drivers heard complaints that they were driving too slowly.
“But we always follow the ‘A’
feature - the top men's race - and anything looks slow compared to that,” Mrs.
Andrews explained.
“But we want to put on a good
show, so I just put my foot in it and go now.”
Maggie said there have been no
serious accidents in the women's races, but that all depends on what you call
serious. A head-on collision and a rolling car aren't exactly the ways many
women would describe “minor” mishaps.
“In our first race,” Mrs.
Andrews explained, “a girl spun out ahead of me and my car hit her head-on.
Nobody was hurt.”
“Another girl rolled her car -
and I was involved in that one, too. She leaned, I bumped her, she spun out and
I hit her on the side.”
“She wasn't hurt - at least not
in the accident. A guy came out of the pits to pick her up, but dropped her on
her rear. That hurt more than anything else.”
Maggie says she had never been
on a track until this year. She is not afraid of the track, she says, but
admits she “has no idea how fast I'm going when I'm out there.”
“I blew the engine in my car in
the first race, but it happened after the checkered flag,” Mrs. Andrews said,
“Fortunately, we had a spare motor. And most of the money we win goes back into
the car.”
Maggie says that, including
money from her two sponsors, she can win $40 with a victory at Hawkeye Downs.
She wins less at Independence .
Maggie spent her early years in
Princeton , Mo. , where she participated in the high
school band and in volleyball.
Racing? Oh, she might see - or
hear of – the county fair races at Bethany
and Trenton ,
or the State Fair at Sedalia .
Now, at the track, they can't even
say, “Gentlemen start your engines” and be correct.
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