Harold Fair - Photo courtesy of Rand Thompson
Anderson, Ind. (August 25, 1990) - Harold Fair has an excellent memory for the disasters that have happened in his career.
The Detroit native may have trouble
remembering what happened Saturday in the 24th running of the Anderson 400...
He won.
Fair, who started 19th in the
24-car field, held off Scott Hansen and Bob Senneker over the last 50 laps to
capture his first win on the American Speed Association circuit in over a year.
Fair made the field by virtue of a
third-place finish in Friday's last-chance race for non-qualifiers.
He immediately recalled the last
time that he had not qualified, "Cincinnati, three years ago." His
answer for how long it had been since he won an ASA race ... "last June at
Berlin (Marne, Mich.)."
The win was worth $6,000 for Fair
in the inaugural AC-Delco Challenge series. And just as importantly, it kept
him in the running for the first North American Challenge Cup awarded to the
ASA point’s winner.
Fair broke a header with 70 laps to
go; leaving him with only five of his engine's original six cylinders. With the
hard-charging Senneker and Hansen close behind, thoughts of a memorable
breakdown crossed his mind.
But Fair used the advantage the
Anderson Speedway track offered.
The track is narrow, making passing
difficult. Fair wasn't about to pull over and let Senneker and Hansen by.
"My crew told me that the only
way anyone was going to pass me was if they went three rows up in the grandstands," said an elated Fair. "They stayed up
until two o'clock in the morning
to get the car right. I knew it
was fast, but I didn't know it
would be that fast."
Senneker, who had to fight a
collapsed right-front spring, still had enough power to begin reeling in Fair over the last 100 laps.
On lap 360, Hansen began to push
Senneker for second place, putting all three cars bumper-to-bumper for several laps.
Senneker made contact with the rear
of Fair's Chevrolet Lumina, causing a flat tire which took the current points
leader out of contention.
Then it was Hansen's turn to
challenge. For the next 20 laps, Hansen tried every measure he could find to
get around Fair. But Fair used as much track as possible to hold off the Green
Bay native.
"It was a fun race," said
Hansen, who remained second in the point’s race. "But I can't blame
Harold. He did what he had to do. I
would've done the same thing. My car was running real fast but I burned up my
tires trying to catch him."
Another Wisconsin product, Richie
Bickle of Edgerton, survived one disaster after another to finish third, one
lap down. Bickle ran the last half of the race with his left-front fender gone
and then finished the race without brakes.
Results –
1. Harold Fair
2. Scott Hansen
3. Rich Bickle
4. Bob Senneker
5. Tony Raines
6. Kent Stauffer
7. Dennis Vogel
8. Johnny Benson Jr.
9. Ted Musgrave
10. John Wilson
11. John Olson
12. Glen Allen Jr.
13. Tim Kezman
14. Mike Eddy
15. Dave Jackson
16. Lonnie Rush Jr.
17. Gary St. Amant
18. Junior Hanley
19. Bob Sensiba
20. Todd Forbes
21. Jeff Neal
22. Joe Shear
23. Tom Jones
24. Tim Steele
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