By Kyle Ealy
Norm
Nelson of Racine , Wis. , who at age 47 was trying to quit driving
but would get behind the steering wheel when his driver, Roger McCluskey, was
not available, would win his record fourth Du Quoin 100-mile stock car
championship on September
7, 1970 .
Nelson
had also won at Du Quoin in 1960, 1963 and 1967 and thus became the first four-time
champion at Du Quoin. Nelson, driving car #1, a 1969 Plymouth Roadrunner; Jack Bowsher in # 2, a
1970 Ford Torino; and Don White in # 3, a 1969 Dodge Charger, dominated the
early stages of the race.
Nelson
led for the first 29 laps until White collared him on the east straightaway and
took the lead.
On
the 46th lap J. C. Klotz flipped in the south turn and made a sensational upright
landing atop the guard rail. Several cars took advantage of the yellow flag caution
period to make pit stops and Nelson emerged in front again at lap No. 47. He
was never headed, again.
The
race produced two Du Quoin race records of $31,930 in total purse and 19,948 in
paid attendance. Nelson collected $6,066 for his victory and added 200 points to
his total in his quest for a national title. The winning time of 1 hour, 21
minutes and 3.4 seconds (84.438 miles per hour) could not match the 1:09:50.42
clocking for Don White in 1966, however, as 23 laps were run under the caution
flag.
A
near capacity crowd of 17,500 stock car race fans sat quietly through almost 90
laps on Sunday afternoon, September 6, 1971 , then rose to its feet for a roaring
finish in which nobody knew who the winner was.
Verlin
Eaker of Cedar Rapids , Iowa , driving a 1971 Plymouth , was announced as the winner even
though he finished third behind Don White and Lem Blankenship of Keokuk , Iowa .
Confusion
at the finish had been caused by three caution slowdowns of about five laps each
on the 25th, 71st and 82nd laps. Jack Bowsher
of Springfield , Ohio , driving a 1971 Ford, had led
throughout the race and had pulled away more than half a lap in front.
After
the third caution period, both White and Blankenship again were running almost
on Bowsher’s tailpipe. On the 90th lap, White passed Bowsher to take
the lead. Two laps later White went wide in the north turn and Bowsher and Blankenship
both passed him.
Hitting
the north turn on the next lap, leader Bowsher blew his right rear tire and was
forced to go to the pits. White led until Blankenship passed him on the 98th
lap only to have White speed by Blankenship on the north turn of the last lap
and cross the finish line first.
Confused?
After
some conversation, USAC officials ruled Eaker was the first driver to make his
mandatory pit stop during the first caution period. He then apparently had
gained a lap on the rest of the field in subsequent pit stops by other drivers.
Thus, he was the first to complete 100 miles even though he running third at
the time.
Eaker,
who had claimed the pole with a qualifying time of 39.24 seconds (91.743 miles
per hour), earned $5,821 out of the total purse of $30,642. White got $3,983 for
second and Blankenship grabbed $2,757 for third. Eaker’s winning time of 1
hour, 10 minutes and 56 seconds was good for an average speed of 84.586
miles per hour.
A
disappointed Bowsher was credited with seventh but long after the crowd had
filed out, he was dropped to 30th and last position. It was reported
that his crew had made an illegal tire change after time trials.
There would be no confusion, no discrepancies or discussion
when the checkers flew at Du Quoin on September 4, 1972 . Jack Bowsher made sure of
that…
Bowsher
would set a new qualifying record in the time trials then easily won the
caution-free 100-mile stock car race on Sunday afternoon before 15,721 racing
fans.
Jack Bowsher (21) leads Butch Hartman (75) during the 1972 Du Quoin 100-miler.
Bowsher
piloted his Ford Torino to a 36.41 second clocking for a new USAC dirt track
record of 98.874 miles per hour to claim the pole. Then in the race he seized
the lead and held it comfortably for 30 laps before making the one mandatory
pit stop required in the race.
The
pit stop allowed Butch Hartman of Zanesville, Ohio, driving a Dodge, to take
the lead and hold it until the 76th lap. Hartman had previously made
his mandatory earlier and then had to make an unplanned second stop on the same circuit to change his right rear tire.
That
second stop cost Hartman the lead as Bowsher zoomed back in front. The Springfield , Ohio ,
veteran had lapped the whole field except for Hartman and there was no doubt
about the winner.
Bowsher’s
time of 1 hour, 52 minutes and 34 seconds set a new track record (95.432 miles
per hour) for a 100-mile race at Du Quoin. Bowsher collected $5,522 of the
$29,065 purse. Hartman would settle for second and a payday of $3,778. The
all-Iowa trio of Don White, Ramo Stott, and defending race winner Verlin Eaker
would round out the top five.
Editor’s note: The field of 28 starters
included eight Dodges, seven each of Plymouth
and Ford, and six Chevrolets.
The
1973 event would start three consecutive years of domination by one driver;
Larry “Butch” Hartman.
Hartman
would beat 49-year-old Norm Nelson for the win on Sunday, September 3, leading
98 of the 100 laps. Pole winner Jack Bowsher (lap 1) and Nelson (lap 76) were
the only drivers credited with leading a circuit.
Hartman,
driving a 1973 Dodge, ran the 100 miles in 1 hour, 8 minute and 4.65 seconds.
He averaged 88.156 miles per hour and beat Nelson by only three seconds.
Hartman earned $5,077 for his win while Nelson claimed $3,662.
Following
Hartman and Nelson across the finish line were Ernie Derr of Keokuk, Iowa, in a
’72 Dodge, Derr’s brother-in-law, Don White, in a ‘73 Dodge and Ramo Stott in a
‘73 Charger. A total of 13 of the 30 starters finished the race.
The
defending winner, Bowsher, left the race on the 21st lap when he hit
the fence in the backstretch. He was credited with 21st in the race.
Hartman
would give a repeat performance on September 1, 1974 , and so would Norm Nelson.
Hartman would pass Nelson on the 96th lap to win the 100-mile USAC
stock car race at Du Quoin. Hartman averaged 90.248 miles per hour in his 1974
Dodge. The race was run in 1 hour, six minutes and 29 seconds.
Nelson,
the now 50-year-old grandfather, would settle for the runner-up role once again
driving a Plymouth .
He was followed by Davenport ,
Iowa ’s Terry Ryan in a Chevrolet,
Ernie Derr in a Dodge and Irv Janey of Cedar
Rapids , Iowa , in a
Dodge.
Ryan,
the fast qualifier of the day, led the first 11 laps. Nelson led laps 12 to 69.
Ryan led on lap 70 and Nelson regained the lead and held on until lap 96 when
he was overtaken by Hartman.
Hartman
had a dream the night before winning his third straight Du Quoin race on August 23, 1975 .
“Just
recently my son died of diabetes, my father of a heart attack and a very close
friend in an auto accident. I got to thinking about that saying that things
happen in threes.”
“Then
I got to thinking about having won the 100-mile stock car race at Du Quoin the
last two years. Why not make, it three, I dreamed,” said the mud-spattered
Hartman after his victory before a slim 8,137 crowd on Saturday.
The
leading stock car driver of the 1975 USAC circuit dreamed well as he won the
100-mile event in the slow time of 1 hour, 11 minutes and 13 seconds for a
speed of 84.250 miles per hour.
Only
15 of the 30 starters were running at the finish and Du Quoin State Fair
officials were happy so many ran so long. Dust had erased the 50-mile midget
event Friday and threatened to do the same to the stock cars on Saturday.
“I
never saw the track until I saw the checkered flag,” quipped Hartman of the
race run in a dust fog.
While
Hartman dreamed of threes, Du Quoin State Fair president Bill Hayes and track
superintendent Bob Green dreamed of twos.
“We
can’t have two straight races stopped by dust,” pondered Hayes during the time trials
when dust did appear to be heavy in the straightaway leaving the north turn.
“I
was up all night putting water on the track,” said Green. “I don’t have much
pep left.”
The
heavy dust threatened to stop the race at the start as the USAC officials
whipped out the caution flag on the very first lap. They were back on the green
flag at the fourth lap
Jack
Bowsher, who won the pole in his Ford with a time of 38.36 seconds, led for 13
laps until Hartman took the lead with Irv Janey passing Bowsher for second
position on the 17th lap.
A
caution flag on lap 30 sent Hartman to the pits for the one mandatory pit stop.
Ramo Stott, Jim Scott, and Don White kept up front for several laps until Stott
went high in the north turn on lap 49 as Hartman forged ahead. Hartman led the
race to the finish as Sal Tovella finished second in what could have been a
surprise ending.
The
race went smoothly until the 98th lap when Mark Dinsmore, the
slowest of the 30 qualifiers who started the race, spun into the rail on the
east side of the track to bring a caution flag.
The
caution period gave runner-up Tovella time to get on Hartman’s bumper before
the last lap but Hartman held his lead to win by 20 yards.
Bay
Darnell of Deerfield, Ill., would break the Hartman stranglehold on the August 28, 1976 , as he took
the first prize of $3,711.
Darnell
took the lead on the 79th lap and held on to win in 1 hour, 4
minutes and 58 seconds. A total of 27
cars started the race and 14 finished.
Five different
drivers held the lead at one time or another. Pole sitter Jack Bowsher led the
first 16 laps before the day’s lone caution occurred. Bowsher would use the
slowdown and bring his car into the pits, giving the top spot to Butch Hartman,
who had started seventh.
Action
resumed on lap 20 and Hartman continued to lead the way until the 46th
mile when Darnell took over for two circuits. Hartman regained control only to
have Darnel take over again on lap 52.
Hartman
took the upper hand on the 68th mile, but his lead was short-lived
as Steve Drake of Bloomington ,
Ill. , took charge on the very
next lap. Two miles later, Terry Ryan of Davenport ,
Iowa , became the fifth driver to
lead the event.
However,
Darnell would take over for good one mile later and went on to take his second
career USAC stock car victory. Don White would finish second, followed by Paul
Feldner of Richfield , Wis. , Hartman, and Ken Rowley of El Paso , Ill.
Paul
Feldner couldn’t have picked a better place for his first USAC Stock car win,
when he would win the 100-miler at Du Quoin on August 27, 1977 . Feldner averaged 73.968 miles per hour which
took 1 hour and 21 minutes to complete. Feldner earned $4,100 of the $23,000
purse.
Feldner,
piloting a Dodge, started on the front row, but the opening stages were
dominated by a pair of Volare’s, driven by Ramo Stott and Ken Rowley. Stott grabbed
the initial lead but gave up the top spot to Rowley on lap 15. Stott would
regain the point a lap later and stay in front until the 28th mile
when he crashed into the turn one wall, ending his day. A broken A-frame was
later determined to be the cause of Stott’s misfortune.
Feldner
inherited the top spot but had little time to establish any kind of advantage
when another caution slowed the field on lap 37. Feldner elected to make a pit
stop during the yellow flag and Rowley took over first place when the green was
waved on lap 40.
Rowley’s
afternoon would end when he spun his car on lap 53 and tagged the turn three
wall. Kevin Housby, running behind Rowley, one lap down, slammed into Rowley’s
machine, thus ending both drivers’ day.
Rowley’s
departure handed first place to Charlie Glotzbach of Sellersburg , Ind. ,
who brought his Charger into the pits while still under yellow, turning the
lead back over to Feldner as they went green on lap 55.
Feldner,
his Charger running to perfection, opened up a comfortable advantage, and
despite a couple more cautions, would stretch his lead to half a straightaway
when the checkers waved. Sal Tovella, who started 17th in the 28-car
field, finished an impressive second, while Jim Hurlbert of Mahomet , Ill. ,
took third.
Bay
Darnell would be the first to cross the finish line at Du Quoin but it was Don
White who would be in victory lane following the 100-miler on August 26, 1978 ,
Gary
Bowsher’s spin on lap 97 necessitated a yellow flag. With the green scheduled
to return for the final lap, Darnell charged ahead of White as the two
frontrunners brought the field around for the start of the 100th
mile.
Darnell’s
actions didn’t go unnoticed by USAC officials and although the Deerfield , Ill. ,
chauffeur took the checkers first, he was penalized one position for passing
the leader prior to the green flag, giving the White the win.
Ramo
Stott had dominated the early part of the program, touring the mile in 37.24
seconds (96.670 miles per hour) during qualifying to grab the pole. He would
lead the first 29 miles before pitting, allowing Joe Ruttman to take over.
Sal
Tovella would replace Ruttman in the top spot on lap 32 and hold that lead
until lap 41 when Stott crashed into the outside guardrail bringing out the
yellow. Tovella would pit during the yellow flag allowing Darnell, who had
started second, to claim first place on lap 43.
On lap 47, White accounted for the final lead change when he sped around
Darnell.
White’s
victory was the first of the year for the Keokuk, Iowa , veteran and increased his career total
to 53. Darnell was credited with second, ahead of Terry Ryan, Tom Bigelow (who
started 21st) and Tovella.
Rusty Wallace of St. Louis, Mo., would win the 1979 contest at Du Quoin.
It
was “A.J. Foyt Day” in Du Quoin ,
Ill. , on August 25, 1979 , but the day
really belonged to Rusty Wallace of St.
Louis , Mo. , as the
23-year-old driving star bested Foyt and a field of 22 other USAC stock cars to
win the annual 100-miler.
The
victory was the first for Wallace on the USAC circuit and paid $4,629 from a
total purse of $27,069.
Foyt,
who was honored by Du Quoin area merchants prior to the day’s racing, set fast
time, touring the well-groomed mile in 37.13 seconds, earning the pole
position.
It
was Bay Darnell, who started alongside Foyt, darting into the lead at the start
of the contest and built himself a straightaway advantage by the midpoint of
the race. Darnell would pit during a lap 49 caution allowing Don White to take
over the top spot on the 50th round.
White
would hold the lead for only a couple of laps when Joe Ruttman spun in turn one
bringing out another caution on lap 54. On lap 57, Wallace would blast past
White on the restart to take the lead.
With
his 1979 Firebird performing better than earlier in the day and no more
cautions to slow his pace, Wallace led the rest of the way to pick up the win.
Don White would settle for second, Bay Darnell would take third, Foyt would
grab fourth and Sal Tovella would round out the top five.
It
would require 101 laps, but Sal Tovella would finally score his first ever Du
Quoin victory on August
23, 1980 .
The
reason for the extra lap in the scheduled 100-mile race was an Alan Kulwicki
crash on lap 98, which brought out the red flag. Since the race was restarted
under the yellow, its distance was increased to 101 laps because of USAC rules
stating the last two laps of any race had to be under green.
Tovella
took home $4,946 out of a total purse of $26,929. Joe Ruttman, the fastest
qualifier, finished second followed by Terry Ryan. Those three drivers were the
only ones to finish on the lead lap.
Dean
Roper would grab the lead from his outside front row position until Ruttman
took over on the sixth mile. Rusty Wallace would take charge on lap 19 until
Ryan became the fourth different frontrunner on the 22nd mile.
Wallace
would account for the race’s first caution when he slammed his Firebird into
the turn three wall on lap 25. Pit stops under the yellow resulted in Kulwicki
leading laps 26 and 27 before Tovella took over on 28th try around
the mile dirt oval.
The
lead would never change hands again as Tovella demonstrated his superiority,
dominating the race despite another five additional cautions.
Dean
Roper of Fair Grove , Mo. , would win the USAC stock car race at Du
Quoin on August 29, 1981 ,
much the same way as Tovella did; having to go a few extra laps.
The
event was slated for 75 miles but was extended to 79 when a late caution
enforced the rule that the field had to run the last three circuits under
green.
For
Roper, it was his third USAC win of the season, all run on mile ovals, all
three on dirt surfaces. Sal Tovella, the defending race winner, took second and
was followed by Kevin Gundaker of St.
Louis and Steve Drake. They were the only drivers to
finish on the lead lap.
Lem
Blankenship of Keokuk , Iowa , who won the first qualifying heat to
earn the pole position, led the first 13 laps of main event before fellow
townsman Don White guided his Aspen
into the top spot. White continued to pace the field at the halfway point until
a caution came out on lap 50 for a spin by Herb Shannon of Peoria, Ill.
White
would continue to pace the field after all out action resumed, but would
eventually join Ken Schrader, Rick O’ Brien, Rick Hanley and Tony Emralino in a
multi-car accident on the 62nd circuit. The wreck retired the front-running
White and second place Schrader giving Roper command of the top spot.
The
event’s final yellow came on lap 71 when Blankenship, Dave Bruggink and Ken
Rowley tangled in turn three. It took until lap 77 before action could resume
under green and Roper warded off Tovella for the win.
Rick
O’Brien of Peoria , Ill. , would score his first USAC stock car
victory at Du Quoin on September 5, 1982 . O’Brien took the top spot on lap 96
when Ramo Stott drifted high and wide as the pair negotiated turns three and
fur running side by side.
Driving
a Buick Regal, O’Brien led the remaining three laps to score the triumph and
earn $5,808 from a total purse of $33,000. Stott would settle for second while
Joe Wallace of Kansas City
took third, giving Regal pilots a clean sweep of the top three positions. Dean
Roper (Grand Prix) and Marv Smith (Regal) of Newark , Ohio ,
were fourth and fifth.
Bay
Darnell was the fastest qualifier at 96.850 miles per hour ad led the first 11
laps from his pole position. Butch Garner of Forsyth, Ill. , would pass Darnell and rule the next
dozen laps before Roper took charge on lap 24.
Stott
moved in front on the 30th mile except for lap 58, which was paced by Darnell,
stayed in front until O’ Brien got the upper hand in the waning laps.
The USAC stock car division had been slowly losing its
luster over the past few years with the ’82 event only able to field 21 cars. The
once-popular division was on its last legs but wanted to keep its flailing
division going at Du Quoin as long as they could. In 1983 and ‘84, they would partner
with ARCA in order to attract more cars.
At the end of the ’84 season, USAC folded the stock car
division forever, allowing ARCA to take full reigns of the Labor Day Weekend
race at Du Quoin, an event they still hold today.
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