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The 200 mph letter

Posted By: Anonymous

The 200 mph letter - 01/04/04 02:34 AM

From: Cotton Owens Garage
7065 White Ave.
Spartanburg, S. C.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE



TALLADEGA, Ala. -- There's a magic barrier in all sports:

the 4 minute mile in track, the 60 home runs in baseball, and the

200 mile lap in auto racing.

In 1954 Roger Bannister broke the record for the mile by

turning in a 3 minute 59.4 record run. Since then 6 other people

have cracked that magic barrier, but the name of Bannister still

stands in the record books as the man who did it first.

In 1961 Roger Maris hit 61 home runs eclipsing the record of

60 homers established by Babe Ruth in 1927. Maris now holds the

record, but oldsters will always remind us that Babe Ruth got his

runs in fewer games.

In auto racing, as in track, the distance and challenge never

change. The qualifying record at Indianapolis is 171.953 miles per

hour for the sleek, specially-built championship race cars.

But the magic goal has always been to run a 200 mph lap on a

closed course. Drivers have been tantalizingly close. Last year

Charlie Glotzbach moved the record up to 199.446 in a qualifying run

at the then new Alabama International Motor Speedway in Talladega,

Alabama.



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Charlie's car was the new Dodge Charger Daytona, probably

the most aerodynamic stock car ever built. It featured a low,

pointed nose and had a high safety stabilizer mounted on the rear.

It was quickly nicknamed "the winged thing".....and when Charlie

won the pole, it became "the good winged thing".

The stage was set. This is where the magic barrier would

probably be broken. The 2.66 mile tri-oval track with its 33-degree

banking showed promise of a great future.

On March 24th Buddy Baker was at Talladega for a series of

engineering tests on transmission durability. He drove test car #88,

and it seemed possible that this all-out driver might break the 200

mile barrier. If he did he'd make history, but that history would

always be subject to question unless the timing was official.

The rain out of the Atlanta race forced postponement of three

other NASCAR Grand National races this week, and the officials were

available. Chief NASCAR Timer and Scorer Joe Epton brought his

timing equipment to Talladega....just in case.

The odds weren't good. Like the song says: "When it's a rainy

night in Georgia, it seems like it's raining all over the world".

Last week more than 10 inches of rain fell on Alabama. On Monday it

rained some more. On Tuesday morning there was another thunderstorm.

The track was not only wet, but any rubber which had been embedded

in the track was washed away. A washed down track is traditionally

slower.



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But the skies cleared, the sun came out and patches in the

track started drying out. But it took a full dry track for tests

such as these. Noontime came and went, and by mid afternoon the

track looked fit. Epton and his observers and the clocks were in

position.

First runs were good for testing, but looked bad on the

clocks. The speeds started at 194 and then moved up to 198.5 as

Baker "looked for the groove" and the pit crew kept adjusting to

get the right chassis set-up.

Buddy Baker, 29, the 6'5" son of one of stock cars most

colorful drivers, was ready and relaxed. He'd shot skeet the

afternoon before and expected to go fishing later in the day. He

loves the outdoors and this was a holiday.

On the 30th lap, Joe Epton let out a whoop. The time was

47.857 and the speed was 200.096. Buddy and his Dodge Charger

Daytona had done it. The barrier was broken and they flagged Buddy

in to tell him the good news. His name would now go into the world

record books as the first driver to break the magic 200 mile per hour

lap barrier.

The crew, the engineers, officials and Goodyear Tire crew

went wild. History had been made, and they were all part of the

scene. A stock car racer -- their kind of racer -- had done it.

But after a few minutes of celebration, things returned to normal.

The engineers took over. The test was to go on. Buddy said: "you

better keep watching, maybe I'll do it again."



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Engineer Larry Rathgeb reminded Buddy that he was here

for a test, not a race. "Just get out there and give us some

good, hard steady laps and forget about racing. You've already

got your record, so now help me get my test done. Then we'll

all go fishing."

Buddy climbed back into the car and started methodically

circling the track in "his groove". Joe Epton and his crew of

observers kept watching the clocks. It was obvious that Baker

was still deadly serious about running hard on every lap.

The numbers on the clocks flicked away. All laps were

close at 200 miles and two more were over. One was at 200.330

and a lap time of 47.807. Another was 200.447 and 47.773 seconds.

Not only had the 200 mile mark been broken, but Buddy had

bettered on three separate occasions. Now he settled down and ran

steadily. That was his job. Today he was a test driver, not a

racer.



# # #



(32470FW)



Patrick
Posted By: 383man

Re: The 200 mph letter - 01/04/04 02:39 AM

I remember that well. Hard to believe he was cracking 200 mph in 1970 in a car that is nowhere near as tech as the stock cars of today. It sure was good to see a Mopar do it when the Talladega's were right on the heels of the wing cars but were still a click behind them ! Ron
Posted By: Hemi_Joel

Re: The 200 mph letter - 01/04/04 04:29 AM

Wow, that is a great letter. Thanks for posting it!
Posted By: kpzbee

Re: The 200 mph letter - 01/04/04 05:03 PM

That is really cool! Thanks for sharing that!
Posted By: The_Mean_Machine

Re: The 200 mph letter - 01/04/04 06:33 PM

Awesome...
thanks,
Frank
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