Chicago, Ill.—Before getting too far
into the New Year, let’s take a look
back at auto racing in the Chicago
area 25 and 50 years ago. The years
were 1988 and 1963.
25 Years Ago – 1988
Tony Izzo, Roger Long and John Knaus
were among repeat track champions at
Chicago area speedways during the
1988 season.
Izzo, the veteran dirt track
campaigner, added another Santa Fe
Speedway late model title to his
career accomplishments. Izzo, who
began wheeling late model cars in
the mid 1960s at the dirt track near
Willow Springs., captured his ninth
late model crown at Santa Fe, making
him easily the winningest driver in
the track’s history. Izzo, who won
12 features at the ‘Fe in 1988,
scored his fifth Santa Fe track
championship in a row. Izzo finished
ahead of Jim O’Connor and Jim
Partipilo in the final standings.
Tim Boiko drove his Monte Carlo to
seven feature wins during the season
on his way to winning Santa Fe’s
sportsman division crown. Other
Santa Fe champions that year
included Ivan Trent (Short Track
American Racers), Jim Herhold
(Lighting Rods), Gary Greben (Figure
Eight) and Diane Bereckis (Ladies
Division).
For the second
consecutive year, John Provenzano
won Santa Fe’s annual National Clay
Track Championship 200-lap battle.
Provenzano bested Dennis Erb, Sr.
and Fred Lofgren as more than 50
entries were on hand.
Open wheel action at Santa Fe saw
Sammy and Jeff Swindell both win “A”
features during World of Outlaws
Sprint Car Series competition. Rich
Vogler notched a United States Auto
Club (USAC) midget feature during
the season.
In addition to his Saturday and
Sunday schedule at Santa Fe, Izzo
took over the promotional chores at
the Kankakee Speedway in 1988. Izzo
hosted the stock car racing action
at the dirt fairgrounds oval every
Friday night after making numerous
improvements before the season
began. Winning the late model
division title, Roger Long, the
“racing farmer,” won seven feature
races during the year although he
missed several events at season’s
end because of engine problems. It
was the third Kankakee championship
for Long. Other Kankakee titlists
included Mike Hollifield (limited
late model), Steve McCarty (street
stock) and 18-year-old Tony Izzo,
Jr. (Nim Rod).
Roger Long won another track
championship at Kankakee in 1988
(Stan Kalwasinski Photo)
Hollifield, the
Indiana stock car pilot also
captured the late model season title
at the Southlake Speedway in Crown
Point, Ind. Eddie Leviner was the
track’s street stock champ.
Long before his
son Chad’s success in NASCAR, John
Knaus made it two NASCAR Grand
American late model titles in a row
at the Rockford Speedway. Knaus, who
had raced on both pavement and dirt
through his career, was a regular in
ARTGO and American Speed Association
(ASA) competition before returning
full-time to Rockford where he raced
in the 1970s. Bryan Young was
Rockford’s American Short Tracker
champion. Other Rockford champions
were Darrell Williams (limited
sportsman), Bryan Sanwick
(roadrunner) and Gary Head (figure
eight).
Tony Hertko won the late model
championships at both the Grundy
County Speedway in Morris and at the
Illiana Motor Speedway in
Schererville, Ind. Putting together
a season total of 10 feature wins in
his Camaro, Hertko became the first
driver since Ed Hoffman in 1983 to
win the late model crown at both
tracks in the same year. Hertko
finished ahead of Rick Kleich, Jr.
and Wayne Para in the final Illiana
points and Mike Varner and Dan Odell
in the Grundy standings.
Second
generation racer Ted Musgrave won
Illiana’s 27th
annual Tony Bettenhausen Memorial
100 lapper over Tom Jones, Larry
Schuler and Bobby Dotter. A field of
43 entries was on hand with Para
grabbing fast time honors.
Winning a total of 11 feature races,
sportsman division driver Craig
Johnson also won both the Grundy and
Illiana championships in 1988. Brett
Sontag was Grundy’s budget bumper
class champion and Larry Middleton,
Jr. nailed down the Illiana street
stock title.
Mike White
drove to 22 feature wins to add his
name to the late model champion
driver honor roll at Raceway Park
near Blue Island. White finished
ahead of Jim Johnson and Gary Raven
in the points. Hank Pugh burned up
the track’s hobby stock action,
winning 17 features and the division
title. Russ Foust picked up mini
stock honors and Randy Gifford the
spectator class championship.
Mike White was the 1988 champion
at Raceway Park
(Stan Kalwasinski Photo)
Sycamore
Speedway saw Tom Markham emerge as
the super late model champion for
1988. Tom Hughes was named the
speedway’s late model champion,
while Dan Markham won the spectator
title and Kim Brazelton the powder
puff division crown.
Running a half
dozen events at area speedways, the
ARTGO Challenge Series saw the first
non-Wisconsin driver win the
circuit’s season championship with
Michigan’s Butch Miller grabbing the
honor. Miller won five ARTGO events
in 16 starts. Miller was also the
ASA champion in 1988, winning six
races of a 16-race schedule. ASA
also presented its Grand Marque
Series with Indiana’s Ray Fullen
wining the season championship.
ARTGO Champion Butch Miller at the
Rockford Speedway in early April,
1988
(Stan Kalwasinski Photo)
ARTGO
co-sanctioned Rockford’s annual
National Short Track Championships
event with the NASCAR All-American
Challenge Series. Wisconsin’s John
Ziegler guided his Thunderbird to
the victory in the 303-lap race,
besting Scott Hansen and Rich Bickle,
Jr.
Local open
wheel speedster Bruce Field won a
USAC Silver Crown Championship
Series event at Indianapolis Raceway
Park (Clermont, Ind.) in early July.
Field also was a winner in All
American Midget Series competition,
winning four times, two wins each on
the“high-banks” at Indiana’s Salem
and Winchester speedways.
John Warren won two of seven
features held in United Midget Auto
Racing Association (UMARA) midget
competition to win his second
straight UMARA driving crown. Joliet
area midget racer Danny Pens won the
World Wide Auto Racing midget racing
championship. In March, Pens won a
USAC midget race indoors at the
Rosemont Horizon. Champions for the
Midwest Mini-Champ Racing
Association were Dubs Davis (A
Class) and Ed Zwicky (B Class).
50
Years Ago – 1963
Late model
convertible stock car competition
was the rule of thumb at O’Hare
Stadium in Schiller Park with Gene
Marmor being crowned the track
champion at the paved oval. Marmor
won 16 feature races in his ’63
Chevy “rag top” and bested Erik
Johnson and Bill Lutz in the final
standings. Piloting a fresh ’63
Chevy convertible for car owner Mike
Terrafino, Whitey Gerken was the
winner of O’Hare’s second annual
500-lap classic. Gerken had a
nine-lap lead over second place
finisher Elmer Musgrave at starter
Art Kelly’s checkered flag. Rich
Davis was the track’s cadet
(sportsman) division champion.
Bill Cornwall
was the late model stock car
champion at Raceway Park – the
“World’s Busiest Track.” Beginning
the year with a ’60 Chevy and
upgrading it later to a ’63 version,
Cornwall finished ahead of Bud
Koehler and Ted Janecyk in the final
points, winning 18 features along
the way. Jerry Kemperman won the
speedway’s 300-lap battle in Dave
Roulo’s battered, but fast, ‘63
Chevy, defeating Don Oldenberg and
Cornwall in the marathon run. Ray
Freeman was the track’s claiming
division champion, winning 13
feature races.
Bill Cornwall receives
congratulations after a big win at
Raceway Park in 1963
(Bud Norman Photo)
Rabon Hinkle and his 1956 Mercury
were champions in the late model
action at Illiana Motor Speedway.
Hinkle bested Ed Wilkie and brother,
Raleigh Hinkle, in the Steel City
Racing Association competition that
began in late July. Paul Goldsmith
and his Norm Nelson-owned ’63
Plymouth were the winners of the
USAC-sanctioned Tony Bettenhausen
Memorial 100 lapper. Earlier in the
year, Goldsmith, in a Ray Nichels-prepared
’63 Pontiac, was also a USAC winner
at Illiana over Nelson and A.J. Foyt.
Elmer Musgrave and his ’63 Mercury
captured another USAC go at Illiana
in late June ahead of Nelson. IMCA
sprint cars took to the paved
Illiana half-mile in May with Ohio’s
Jim McCune winning a 25-lap feature
over Johnny White and Gordon
Woolley.
In a 1963 ½ fastback Ford, Curtis
Turner, serving a suspension from
NASCAR, won a USAC stock car race on
the road course at the Meadowdale
International Raceways in
Carpentersville on July 28,
finishing ahead of Don White. The
race was shortened (225 miles from
an original 250 miles) because of
darkness and the track surface
breaking apart. Later in the year,
Rick Kleich in a ’62 Chevy would win
an “open competition”100-mile stock
car race at Meadowdale over Bill
Shoulders and Eddie Meyer.
Curtis Turner, a regular in USAC
stock car action in 1963, takes a
break at Illiana Motor Speedway.
(Vince Mayer Photo)
Sal Tovella and
his ’63 Chevy II were the “top guns”
in stock car racing at Chicago’s
Soldier Field. Bob Chapman gave
Tovella plenty of competition.
Tovella won the 100-lap Mid Season
Championship and Ted Hane won the
50-lap “season finale” on July 28 as
Hane and his Ford Fairlane bested
Rich Sundling and Tovella. Jerry
Bloom was the track’s novice
division titlist.
A former stock
car champion at Soldier Field, Fred
Lorenzen of Elmhurst was voted
NASCAR’s Most Popular Driver.
Lorenzen and his Holman Moody Ford
won six Grand National races and
became the first NASCAR driver to
ever win over $100,000 in a single
season.
Bill Van Allen
and his Studebaker Lark garnered top
laurels on the dirt at Santa Fe,
winning 20 features at the“track of
clay.” Rich Clement won Santa Fe
Speedway’s big 200-lap event. Gene
Bragg picked up six main event
victories on his way to Santa Fe’s
sportsman division title. Johnny
Reimer (modifieds) and Dennis Burgan
(sportsman stock cars) were the “top
guns” on the dirt at the Waukegan
Speedway. Larry Cope picked up
season honors in the modified coupe
class at Broadway Speedway in Crown
Point, Ind., while Dave Whitcomb was
the kingpin in the coupe action at
the Rensselaer (Ind.) fairgrounds
dirt oval. Danny Guth in Bill Carr’s
Ford won Rensselaer’s 100-lap Season
Championship race.
Bill Van Allen and his Lark at
Santa Fe Speedway in 1963
(Vince Mayer Photo)
Al Shear won
the Forest City 200 at the Rockford
Speedway in September. Former
two-time track champion, Red Aase, a
12-year stock car veteran, again won
season track championship honors
ahead of “rookie of the year” Willie
Reints. Chuck Stoudt became Sycamore
Speedway’s first stock car champion.
Russ Sweedler, wheeling Bob Steffes’
Chevy II-powered open wheeler, was
the champion in the United Auto
Racing Association (UARA) midget
ranks. With UARA racing weekly at
the Joliet Memorial Stadium,
Sweedler won 11 feature races on his
way to the title. Sweedler finished
ahead of veteran Ray Elliott and Bob
Hauck in the final point standings.
Henry Pens won a 50-lap UARA midget
feature at the Mazon Speed Bowl on
the Fourth of July ahead of Jerry
Matter. Veteran Harry Turner won an
open competition midget feature at
Mazon in September.
Johnny Riva and
Chuck Rodee won USAC midget races at
Soldier Field. Don Branson was a
USAC midget winner at the Rockford
Speedway, while Ronnie Duman and
Bobby Grim scored USAC midget
victories indoors at Chicago’s
International Amphitheatre in
January. Indoor drag racing was also
held at the Amphitheatre during the
winter months.
The address for
news and comments is 9618 Cypress
Ave., Munster, Ind. 46321-3418 or
e-mail to
skalwasinski@yahoo.com.
END