Daytona International Speedway | |
Race information | |
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Most wins (drivers) | Jim Rathmann (1) |
Most wins (constructors) | Watson (1) |
Circuit length | 4.023 km (2.5 miles) |
Race length | 160.934 km (100.000 miles) |
Laps | 40 |
Last race (1959) | |
Pole position | |
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Podium | |
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Fastest lap |
The Daytona 100 was a USAC Championship Car race held at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida on Saturday April 4, 1959. It was the first and only Indy car race held on the high banks of Daytona, and saw incredible speeds turned in by the front-engined "roadsters." The race was part of a triple-header weekend featuring races for the USAC Championship Cars, Formula Libre, and a USAC-FIA sports car endurance race.
Both the Champ Car and Formula Libre races were won by Jim Rathmann. However, the weekend was marred by the tragic death of George Amick, who was killed in a crash on the final lap of the Champ Car race. Amick's death came less than two months after Marshall Teague was also killed testing a highly modified Indy roadster at the track. Despite a predicted crowd of over 30,000 spectators for the weekend, [1] turnout was disappointing. With estimates as low as 7,000 to 10,000 in attendance for Saturday, [2] the event was also seen as unsuccessful and a money-loser. [3] In the wake of the tragic circumstances, the blindingly fast speeds were deemed too dangerous for the track, and the Indy cars would never again race on the Daytona International Speedway oval. [2] The sports cars, however, would return and the Daytona Continental later became an annual event, now known as the 24 Hours of Daytona.
The Daytona 100 was the first race of the 1959 USAC Championship Trail, and the first Championship race held in the state of Florida since a board track race at Fulford–Miami Speedway in 1926. There would not be another Indy car race held in Florida until the Miami Grand Prix in 1985.
In 2006 and again in 2007, the IndyCar Series held a compatibility test on the Daytona International Speedway motorcycle road course (which skips the west banking), the first time Indy type cars had driven on the track in over 45 years. The test was to evaluate the facility as a possible warm-weather testing venue (and perhaps a future racing venue). However, a race was never scheduled, and the series never returned.
Construction on the Daytona International Speedway broke ground on November 25, 1957. [4] NASCAR founder Bill France Sr. constructed the facility as a replacement for the Daytona Beach Road Course. [5] He envisioned the track as having the steepest banking possible to allow the cars to reach high speeds and to give spectators the best view of the cars on track. The inaugural Daytona 500 was scheduled for February 22, 1959, and the race was to become the most prestigious stock car race in the county. The track was intended to not only be a showcase for stock cars, but was designed to host Championship Cars, sports cars, motorcycles, and closed-course speed record runs.
During track construction over the summer of 1958, Duane Carter, then-competition director of USAC, began negotiations with Bill France about hosting a Championship Car race at Daytona. [6] A 250-mile [6] or 300-mile [3] race on July 4 was the focus of the discussions. On November 17, 1958, USAC announced that a 100-mile Championship Car race would be held on the high banked 21⁄2 mile Daytona International Speedway oval on Saturday April 4, 1959. It would serve as the season opener for the 1959 season. [7] The race would be paired with a 1000-kilometer sports car race to be held on the combined road course. [8] [9] USAC decided to first hold a shorter 100-mile race at Daytona to allow teams to acclimate themselves to the new facility, and to serve as a tune-up for a bigger race tentatively scheduled for July 4. [9] [10] A second 100-mile race for Formula Libre machines was also added to the weekend. [11] The field for the Formula Libre race would be open to unlimited engine displacements. Officials hoped the Formula Libre race would attract the Champ Cars, specially modified Champ Cars, and selected sports cars.
USAC officials visited the Daytona International Speedway while it was still under construction. [10] The officials were impressed by the facility, and expected very high speeds. [12] Immediately, comparisons were being made to the Race of Two Worlds which was held at Monza in 1957 and 1958. The one-lap record in a Championship Car was set on the Monza oval by Tony Bettenhausen at a speed of 177.045 mph. Speeds at Daytona were expected to rival those seen at Monza. [10] The qualifying track record at the Indianapolis 500 was held by Dick Rathmann (145.974 mph) from 1958, meaning speeds at Daytona were predicted to be over 30 mph faster than Indy.
Henry Banks was named the new competition director at USAC for 1959. [12] Banks toured Daytona with Tom Binford and others, inspecting the safety features and named Harlan Fengler as the chief steward for the race. [12]
Upon completion of the Daytona International Speedway, Bill France wanted some USAC Championship Car teams to conduct exhibition speed runs during Speedweeks as a way to promote the new facility. [13] USAC declined to conduct a full-field exhibition, [12] but permitted teams the option to participate in a series of unofficial "familiarization runs" during Speedweeks. [14] Car owner Chapman S. Root of nearby Ormond Beach was the first to express interest in participating. [9] [15] Three other teams were expected to test as well. [16]
Root arrived at the track with the Sumar Streamliner, a modified Indy roadster with streamlined body and a canopy top. [17] The driver was to be Marshall Teague, a former NASCAR and AAA/USAC Stock Car driver turned Champ Car driver. [18] On Monday February 9, Teague made his first practice laps, turning a total of nine laps. [19] His best lap was 171.821 mph. It was the fastest single lap ever run on a closed circuit in the United States. [20] [21]
On Tuesday February 10, the crew changed the gearing in the transmission, [22] and dropped the car's ride height to lower its center of gravity and prepared to make another speed run. [23] Teague ran about 10 to 15 laps in the 170 mph range, before being called in by the crew due to gusty winds. His fastest lap had been 170.06 mph, slightly below his mark set the day before. In addition, tire technicians observed something wrong with the left rear tire, and wanted him to return to the pits immediately. [24] The crew discovered a cut tire, presumably from running over a piece of debris, and a protruding innertube, and called off practice for the day. [25]
On Wednesday February 11, Marshall Teague returned to the track in the Sumar Streamliner to make another speed record attempt. Shortly after 12:00 p.m., Teague completed three laps around the track, and was gradually working his car up to speed. After laps timed at 128.42 mph, and 160.25 mph, Teague entered turns one and two on his fifth lap. The rear end of the car drifted out, and the nose of the car dipped and dug down into the pavement. The car started flipping wildly down the track, gouging chunks of asphalt, and littering debris. The plastic canopy top was broken off, and the seat was thrown from the car with Teague still buckled in the harness. Teague was killed instantly of a fractured skull. [26] [27] [28] Less than two weeks after the track opened, Teague became the first driver to be killed in a crash at Daytona.
Despite the fatal crash of Marshall Teague, USAC officials decided it was not necessary to call off the April Championship Car races. [29] The test session resumed on Thursday February 12. Two cars were at the track being prepared, but neither took any laps on Thursday. Car owner Art Lathrope had a Smokey Yunick-prepared Kuzma/Offenhauser roadster with driver Jim Rathmann. The other car was a Nisonger/Chevrolet sports car owned by Bill Sadler, with driver Bob Said. USAC did not permit Said to drive on Thursday, pending a safety inspection. [30]
On Friday February 13, Jim Rathmann took to the track, turning a lap of 170.06 mph. Rathmann compared the track to Monza, where he had been victorious in the Race of Two Worlds. Champ Car testing was put on hold for a week, in order to allow NASCAR exclusive use of the track for the next several days. Rathmann planned to return for one last attempt at a record. [31] Meanwhile, Lee Petty would go on to win the Inaugural Daytona 500.
The final day of Champ Car testing was held on Thursday February 19. Brothers Jim and Dick Rathmann were on hand, planning to take turns in the Kuzma//Offenhauser. Both were aiming at Marshall Teague's track record from the previous week, and likewise hoping to set a closed-course speed record. [32] Both drivers took hot laps, but neither were fast enough to eclipse Teague's lap time, hampered largely due to strong, gusty winds. Car owner Art Lathrope, in fact, instructed his drivers not to go all out, not wanting anyone to risk getting injured. He was confident that when they returned in March, with more preparation, speeds would be up another 10 mph. Dick Rathmann was the fastest of the day at 170.65 mph, and Jim Rathmann had a best lap of 166.11 mph. [33]
In early March, two-time National Champion Tony Bettenhausen headlined the list of entries received for the race. As many as thirty entries were expected. [34]
Practice and qualifying was scheduled for the ten days leading up to the race. Pole qualifying for the Champ Car race was scheduled for Saturday March 28. The second day of qualifying was scheduled for Sunday March 29, with a third day scheduled for mid-week. Practice and qualifying for the sports car endurance race would be held in the latter parts of the week.
Saturday would feature a doubleheader of 100-mile (40-lap) races. The Championship Car race was scheduled for 2:00 p.m., and the Formula Libre race was scheduled afterwards at 3:30 p.m. The sports car endurance race was scheduled for 1000 kilometers (164 laps) around the 3.81-mile combined road course. [35] The endurance race would start Sunday at 12:30 p.m., and was expected to race well into the evening.
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WNDB covered the Championship Car and Formula Libre races live on radio with anchor Ted Webbe. Hal Hambrick and Val Meloy served as booth analysts, with Ben Taylor the roving reporter covering the pit area and victory lane. The broadcast was picked up by numerous radio stations in the eastern United States. [36]
Practice began on Wednesday March 25. Pole qualifying was scheduled for Saturday March 28. Qualifiers on the second day of qualifying would line up behind the first day qualifiers, and so on, mimicking the format used at Indianapolis. Each qualifying attempt consisted of one warm-up lap, and two timed laps, with the best single lap recorded as the car's qualifying speed.
After testing and practice, participants generally praised the course. However, there was an underlying concern around the paddock about the incredible speeds. Cars were routinely turning laps at an average speed of more than 30 mph faster than laps turned at Indianapolis. Another point of concern was the abrupt transition from the steep 31° banking in the turns to the nearly flat apron. Drivers were worried that a spinning car may come down the banking and hit the apron, resulting in a serious crash. [37]
Practice and testing for the Championship Cars began on Wednesday March 25. A total of 27 cars were officially entered and many were already arriving in the garage area. In order to allow drivers to familiarize themselves to the course, USAC chief steward Harlan Fengler imposed a 150 mph speed limit for each driver during their first ten laps. The next ten laps could be run at 160 mph. The speed limit was put in place as a safety precaution.
Elmer George was one of the drivers who took laps in Wednesday, turning a fast lap of 155.17 mph. Jim Rathmann took to the track in a specially-modified Kurtis-Kraft roadster prepared by Ray Nichels. The car had a 370 in3 Pontiac V8 engine. The test run was arranged by Firestone in order to test high speed tires. Rathmann clocked a fast lap of 172.80 mph, setting a new unofficial track record, eclipsing the lap turned in by Marshall Teague back in February. [38]
Dick Rathmann completed a practice lap at 170.26 mph in the Sumar Special owned by Chapman Root. Jim Rathmann took laps in the Simoniz Special owned by Lindsey Hopkins. Elmer George (167.22 mph) also was out on the track. [39]
High winds kept the speeds down until late in the afternoon. Dick Rathmann turned the fastest lap at 173.01 mph, the fastest lap of the week thus far. Coming into the pits, Rathmann spun around three times, but did not make any contact. A total of five cars took the track, the others included Rodger Ward, Eddie Sachs, Don Branson, and Bill Cheesbourg. [40] [41]
The first day of qualifying was held on Saturday March 28. A total of eight cars completed qualifying attempts, with Dick Rathmann (173.210 mph) winning the pole position with a new track record. His brother Jim Rathmann (172.018 mph) qualified second and would sit alongside on the front row. [42] Of the eight cars, six were roadsters, while two (Branson and Sachs) were converted dirt cars.
Three other cars took to the track for practice, but did not attempt to qualify. The only reported incident of the day involved Tony Bettenhausen. During a practice run, a radiator hose blew, enveloping the car in steam. [43]
At the beginning of qualifying, the entry list was finalized at 26 Champ Cars (one car was withdrawn). No additional cars were entered for the Formula Libre race, therefore the same qualifying results and starting lineup for the Champ Car race would be used for the Formula Libre race. [42] Carroll Shelby had intended to enter a 4.5-liter Maserati sports car in the Formula Libre race, but after a lack of adequate practice time, he decided to race in the endurance race on Sunday only. [44]
Start | No | Name | Car | Speed |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 41 | Dick Rathmann | Kurtis/Offenhauser | 173.210 |
2 | 16 | Jim Rathmann | Watson/Offenhauser | 172.018 |
3 | 5 | Rodger Ward | Watson/Offenhauser | 171.038 |
4 | 24 | Dempsey Wilson | Kurtis/Offenhauser | 170.068 |
5 | 21 | Elmer George | Kuzma//Offenhauser | 169.300 |
6 | 65 | Bob Christie | Kurtis/Offenhauser | 168.539 |
7 | 9 | Don Branson | Phillips/Offenhauser | 165.017 |
8 | 44 | Eddie Sachs | Kuzma//Offenhauser | 163.755 |
The second day of qualifying was scheduled for Sunday March 29, which was Easter Sunday. Rain prompted officials to cancel qualifying for the day, but the track dried sufficiently in the afternoon to allow for practice runs. Going down the backstretch, Bob Veith lost control from what he believed to be a wind gust. The car spun and skidded for about 300 yards, then hit and ran up the outside guardrail. The car flipped over, slid 200 yards upside-down, then spun to the grassy infield where it righted itself. Veith suffered shoulder abrasions, and head lacerations, and his helmet was worn from where it scraped along the asphalt pavement. Though not critically injured, Veith would spend the night in the hospital, and his wrecked car was withdrawn. [45] Veith credited the roll bar with saving his life, a new safety requirement introduced by USAC for 1959. [46] It was later determined that a mechanic neglected to remove the starter shaft from the nose of the car. The shaft went against the steering linkage, and made the car uncontrollable, resulting in the crash. [47]
After losing track time on Sunday due to rain, officials announced that the second day of qualifying would be held on Monday March 30. Rain once again kept the track closed in the morning, but the track dried and was opened for qualifying by 2:00 p.m. Officials noticed the ideal conditions, and decided to take advantage of the cool temperatures and calm winds. A record-setting day saw five more cars added to the starting field. George Amick became the fastest qualifier in the field, with a new track record of 176.887 mph. As a second day qualifier, Amick would line up on the inside of the fifth row. Amick's lap was just short of breaking the all-time one lap record for a Championship Car (177 mph) set at Monza during time trials for the Race of Two Worlds. [48] [49] In addition, Amick's Daytona International Speedway competition track record would stand until 1967.
Start | No | Name | Car | Speed |
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9 | 2 | George Amick | Epperly/Offenhauser | 176.887 |
10 | 75 | Tony Bettenhausen | Kuzma//Offenhauser | 173.010 |
11 | 8 | Len Sutton | Lesovsky/Offenhauser | 170.068 |
12 | 25 | Bill Cheesbourg | Kurtis/Offenhauser | 166.852 |
13 | 4 | Jud Larson | Lesovsky/Offenhauser | 163.577 |
Pat Flaherty took his first laps around the track on Tuesday March 31, driving for John Zink. Flaherty was quickly up to speed, turning in laps of over 160 mph. Pole position winner Dick Rathmann took his Sumar Special out for a practice ran, and turned a lap at almost 171 mph before deciding to come in. Rathmann had been instructed by chief mechanic Johnny Blouch to "take it easy." [37]
Tony Bettenhausen, who qualified the Racing Associates Special on Monday, announced that he did so with a "sick" engine. Smokey Yunick announced that the engine was being torn down and rebuilt in time for Saturday's race. [37]
Rain washed out a significant amount of the track activity on Wednesday April 1. Some Championship Car drivers took practice laps, including Pat Flaherty, who ran at over 156 mph. Johnny Thomson's car was expected to arrive from the west coast, and he was expected to make a qualifying attempt on Thursday. [50]
All time trials for the sports car race were postponed until Thursday due to rain. [50]
The third day of qualifying was scheduled for Thursday April 2. Rain in the morning and most of the afternoon, however, washed out time trials for the Championship Cars. The remainder of qualifying was postponed until Friday. Late in the afternoon, the track dried sufficiently enough to allow a one-hour practice session for the sports car race. [51] A total of fifteen cars took to the track, led by Carroll Shelby. Dick Rathmann, driving a Pontiac-Maserati brushed the guardrail coming out of turns one & two. The car suffered only minor damage, and Rathmann was uninjured. [52]
The final day of practice and time trials was scheduled for Friday April 3. [53] After several days of rain and windy conditions, the weather on Friday was ideal for track activity. A total of seven drivers qualified, filling the field to twenty cars, but the attention of the day focused on two crashes involving Jerry Unser and Al Keller, respectively. [54]
During a practice run, Jerry Unser lost control in turns three–four. At a speed of about 155 mph, the car hit a bump in the pavement, and the back end came around, sending the car down to the apron. The car hit the apron, got airborne briefly, then shot upwards across the track tail-first. [54] [55] The car slid and hit the outside guardrail with the left side. The car came to rest in the infield grass losing the hood in the process. Unser was taken to the hospital with minor back injures. The car was badly damaged and withdrawn. Earlier in the day, Al Keller spun in the tri-oval segment of the track, near the start/finish line. After completing a lap at over 165 mph, Keller claims to have hit a rise in the pavement, and lost control. Observers say the car was running a very high line on the track. The car slid for 1,250 feet, and looped around at least four times in the infield grass, splashing puddles of water and mud. [55] The car remained upright, and Keller was not injured. [54]
The final round of time trials saw A. J. Foyt as the fastest qualifier of the day. Foyt ran two identical laps of 168.919 mph, which placed him in the inside of row seven. Pat Flaherty ran a purported first lap of over 172 mph, but the electric eye was not turned on properly. His second lap was cut short by a broken fuel line. Later in the day Flaherty made a second attempt, but with the engine running on only three cylinders, could only manage a lap of 145.773 mph. Only 19 cars completed attempts, with Jimmy Davies unable to go out due to mechanical problems. Officials announced that Davies would be permitted to start the race in the 20th starting position provided the crew was able to make repairs. [54]
Start | No | Name | Car | Speed |
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14 | 10 | A. J. Foyt | Kuzma/Offenhauser | 168.919 |
15 | 3 | Johnny Thomson | Lesovsky/Offenhauser | 166.852 |
16 | 82 | Al Keller | Kuzma//Offenhauser | 164.114 |
17 | 84 | Pat Flaherty | Watson/Offenhauser | 145.773 |
18 | 22 | Jim Packard | Silnes/Offenhauser | 164.654 |
19 | 95 | Bill Randall | Kurtis/Offenhauser | 100.200 |
20 | 53 | Jimmy Davies | Kuzma//Offenhauser | No speed |
Despite the good weather, due to the two crashes and other minor delays, time ran out to hold time trials for the sports car endurance race. Instead, officials decided to line the cars up in order of engine size, with the largest machines at the front. [55] [56]
Row | Inside | Outside |
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1 | Dick Rathmann | Jim Rathmann |
2 | Rodger Ward | Dempsey Wilson |
3 | Elmer George | Bob Christie |
4 | Don Branson | Eddie Sachs |
5 | George Amick | Tony Bettenhausen |
6 | Len Sutton | Bill Cheesbourg |
7 | Jud Larson | A. J. Foyt |
8 | Johnny Thomson | Al Keller |
9 | Pat Flaherty | Jim Packard |
10 | Bill Randall | Jimmy Davies |
The weather forecast for Saturday was partly cloudy skies and a high of 80 °F. Winds were gusting at 15-25 mph. A mediocre crowd estimated at only 7,000-10,000 spectators arrived. The race was scheduled for 40 laps (100 miles), and paid points towards the 1959 USAC National Championship. The 20-car field lined up for the start in ten rows of two, and the race began at 2:00 p.m. Dick Rathmann started from the pole position, with his brother Jim Rathmann on the outside of the front row. Due to the short distance of the race, no scheduled pit stops were expected by the leaders. The expectation going into the race was that a new speed record would be set for 100 miles, and it may be the fastest sanctioned auto race ever run to-date.
At the start, Jim Rathmann took the lead from the outside of the front row and led the first six laps. On lap 5, Tony Bettenhausen brushed the outside guardrail at the exit of turn two. Bettenhausen continued for one additional lap, then pulled into the pits with leaking fluid from the radiator. He dropped out of the race with an oil leak, and vowed never to drive another lap at Daytona, declaring "one mistake here and you're done." Also dropping out early were Len Sutton and Eddie Sachs, both with engine problems.
Rodger Ward took the lead from laps 7–11. Jim Rathmann reassumed the lead on lap 12, setting a blistering, record-setting pace. Rathmann claimed the slipstream slingshot his car ahead of Ward, despite believing that Ward's car might have been running better. Ward stated that he lacked the practice time that Rathmann had on the course, and was reluctant to open up his car to its full potential. Even Rathmann claimed he was trying to take things easy, and despite leading and setting such a fast pace, he was not going as fast as he believed he could have. Rathmann and Ward ran 1st-2nd through the remainder of the race, pulling away from the rest of the field.
On lap 28, Dempsey Wilson crashed in turn two. He went too low in the turn, and the back end slid out. He tagged the guardrail, skidded and looped around. Wilson was not injured, but his car was damaged and would have to be withdrawn from the Formula Libre race afterwards.
On the final lap, Jim Rathmann led Rodger Ward. Over a half-lap behind was Bob Christie in third and George Amick in fourth. Further behind was Dick Rathmann in fifth. As Jim Rathmann and Ward were approaching the checkered flag, the spectacular and breathtaking race appeared to be completed without serious incident. However, at the same instant, a horrific crash occurred on the backstretch, taking the life of George Amick.
Coming out of turn two, Bob Christie and George Amick were battling for 3rd-4th on their 40th and final lap. Amick's car was caught by a gust of wind, and begin to slide, striking the outside guardrail at the start of the backstretch. The car ripped out a 50-foot section of guardrail, shearing eight of the wooden support posts, and flipped airborne. The car sailed in the air for 75 feet, hit the ground, flipped again, and sailed another 60 feet. The car then barrel-rolled about ten times down the backstretch, coming to rest upright in the grass over 500 feet down the track. The magnesium wheels scraping along the pavement showered sparks and flames of "rainbow colors," and debris rained all over the course. The fuel tank, however, remained intact.
Dick Rathmann was trailing about 50 feet behind Amick when the crash occurred. Rathmann veered low and avoided the crashing car, and escaped unscathed. Jim Packard also skirted by the scene. Bill Cheesbourg was running behind Amick, and spun his car to the infield grass to avoid the crash. Cheesbourg slid about 700 feet, but did not make contact. He ran to Amick's aid, but when he arrived at the mangled car, he walked away, realizing that Amick had been killed instantly.
Amick's mangled car came to rest upright, with Amick still strapped in the seat. The front end of the machine was wadded and twisted, and part of it was severed off. Both front wheels were sheared off, and debris littered the course. Amick suffered multiple fractures of the spine column, internal injuries, and the entire left side of his body was torn due to the multiple flips and scraping along the asphalt. The attending physician concluded that Amick was killed instantly.
The red flag was put out immediately, with Jim Rathmann the race winner and Rodger Ward finishing second. Those were the only two cars credited with completing the 40 laps. Rathmann's margin of victory was just over six seconds. All other cars were flagged off the track, and scoring reverted to the previous lap for the rest of the field. Bob Christie was credited with third, and Amick was scored fourth. Rathmann's blistering average speed of 170.261 mph was a new record for a Championship Car race, and also set a world closed-course record for 100 miles.
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The same qualifying lineup from the Championship Car race was used for the Formula Libre race. A total of six cars from the first race did not join the field for the second race. Len Sutton and Eddie Sachs had suffered mechanical problems, while the car of Dempsey Wilson was wrecked. As George Amick was fatally injured in the first race, his car was also withdrawn. A. J. Foyt and Jud Larson also withdrew from the second race.
Dempsey Wilson who had crashed out in the first race, took over the cockpit for Tony Bettenhausen in the #75 Racing Associates machine. The car had dropped out of the first race with an oil leak, but was repaired in time to start the second race. Bettenhausen refused to drive in the Formula Libre race, vowing never to race again at Daytona due to safety concerns. Lastly, after spinning out in the first race, Bill Cheesbourg rejoined the field for the second race. Cheesbourg's car was not damaged after he spun to avoid the crashing car of George Amick on the backstretch.
Despite the race rules and specifications allowing other cars, including cars from the sports car division, no other cars besides the Champ Cars attempted to qualify for the Formula Libre race.
Row | Inside | Outside |
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1 | Dick Rathmann | Jim Rathmann |
2 | Rodger Ward | Elmer George |
3 | Bob Christie | Don Branson |
4 | Dempsey Wilson | Bill Cheesbourg |
5 | Johnny Thomson | Jim Packard |
6 | Al Keller | Pat Flaherty |
7 | Bill Randall | Jimmy Davies |
After the fatal crash in the first race, a lengthy cleanup was needed, which delayed the start of the Formula Libre race by about an hour. Officials shortened the Formula Libre race to 50 miles (20 laps), in part due to high winds, safety concerns, and due to lateness. USAC officials were also concerned about driver fatigue after the grueling pace of the first race.
Jim Rathmann took the lead at the start and led the first lap. Rodger Ward took the lead and led laps 2–4, with the two car battling wheel to wheel. On lap 5, Ward was leading the race when he lost control in turn two. The car spun around twice, and was clipped by Bob Christie. The car was not seriously damaged, and Ward was not injured. The yellow caution light was on for six laps to clean up the incident.
Al Keller (piston) and Bill Randall (oil leak) dropped out after only ten laps. Dempsey Wilson (driving in substitution for Tony Bettenhausen) turned the machine over to Mike Magill on lap 11.
The green flag came back out on lap 10 with Jim Rathmann leading and Dick Rathmann running second. The Rathman brothers battled wheel to wheel over the final ten laps, with Jim holding off Dick for the victory. The margin of victory was approximately 60 feet. Rathmann swept both races for the day, and earned $9,950 in prize money. Rathmann, however, was issued a $100 penalty for not properly slowing down during the yellow light period for Rodger Ward's crash.
With the caution period, the average speed of the Formula Libre race was slower at only 160.694 mph. The wheel-to-wheel competition was decidedly less intense, but the lap speeds were still blindingly fast.
Finish | Start | No | Name | Chassis/Engine | Laps | Status |
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1 | 2 | 16 | Jim Rathmann | Watson/Offenhauser | 20 | 160.694 mph |
2 | 1 | 41 | Dick Rathmann | Kurtis/Offenhauser | 20 | Flagged |
3 | 6 | 65 | Bob Christie | Kurtis/Offenhauser | 20 | Flagged |
4 | 15 | 3 | Johnny Thomson | Lesovsky/Offenhauser | 19 | Flagged |
5 | 18 | 22 | Jim Packard | Silnes/Offenhauser | 19 | Flagged |
6 | 5 | 21 | Elmer George | Kuzma/Offenhauser | 19 | Flagged |
7 | 12 | 25 | Bill Cheesbourg | Kurtis/Offenhauser | 19 | Flagged |
8 | 7 | 9 | Don Branson | Phillips/Offenhauser | 17 | Flagged |
9 | 10 | 75 | Dempsey Wilson (relieved by Mike Magill laps 11–17) | Kuzma/Offenhauser | 17 | Flagged |
10 | 20 | 53 | Jimmy Davies | Kuzma/Offenhauser | 16 | Flagged |
11 | 16 | 82 | Al Keller | Kuzma/Offenhauser | 10 | Piston |
12 | 19 | 95 | Bill Randall | Kurtis/Offenhauser | 10 | Oil leak |
13 | 3 | 5 | Rodger Ward | Watson/Offenhauser | 4 | Spin |
14 | 17 | 84 | Pat Flaherty | Watson/Offenhauser | 4 | Out |
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On Sunday April 5, the USAC-FIA sports car endurance race was held. The race was part of the 1959 USAC Road Racing Championship. The event was scheduled for 1000 kilometers (164 laps) around the 3.81-mile combined road course, running counter-clockwise. [63] Since qualifying was cancelled, the field lined up in order of engine size. Several of the Championship Car drivers entered the race, including Dick and Jim Rathmann, A. J. Foyt, and Jerry Unser, who had recovered from the crash he had earlier in the week. A small crowd of only about 6,000 spectators arrived on a sunny, windy afternoon.
Carroll Shelby and Lloyd Ruby, both in E.B. Rose entries, led the race in the early going, building up a large lead over the rest of the field. Shelby, however, lost ground after a bad pit stop, and eventually the car dropped out with engine failure. Ruby's car also dropped out with a failed oil line. A. J. Foyt ran as high as second, but dropped out with a broken differential.
Due to darkness, the race was shortened from 1000 kilometers to six hours. A total of 14 cars were running at the finish, and no serious incidents were reported. The leaders completed 147 laps (560.07 miles) of the scheduled distance. The Porsche 718 driven by Count Antonio von Döry and Roberto Mieres was declared the winner. The lap total even included a one-lap penalty assessed due to running out of fuel on the track during the course of the race. [64]
Top Three Finishers | ||||||
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Finish | No | Name | Chassis/Engine | Laps | Status | |
1 | 86 | Roberto Mieres Antonio von Döry | Porsche 718 RSK 004 | 147 | 93.345 mph | |
2 | 72 | Bob Said Art Bunker | Porsche 718 RSK | 146 | Running | |
3 | 7 | Paul O'Shea Augie Pabst | Jaguar D-Type | 146 | Running |
Immediately after the race, USAC officials, participants, and media, almost unanimously came to the conclusion that the Daytona International Speedway oval was unsuitable for the USAC Championship Cars. The banking was too steep, putting stress on the equipment, [65] the pavement transitions were too abrupt, and above all, the speeds were much too fast. In addition, the fast speeds and steep banking were difficult physically on the drivers, causing fatigue. [66] The tragic circumstances came in the midst of one of the deadliest stretches in the sport of Indy car competition. [67] Teague and Amick were among ten drivers who perished in a two-season stretch from 1958 to 1959.
Along with the overwhelming safety concerns, the attendance for both the Champ Car races and the sports car race were well below expectation. Within days, USAC president Tom Binford announced the cancellation of the planned July 4 Champ Car race at Daytona. [68] Officials at Daytona replaced it with the Firecracker 250 for the NASCAR stock cars. [69] Indy type cars would never again hold a race at Daytona.
Despite a tiny crowd for the first sports car race, endurance racing would soon find a home at Daytona on the combined road course. The 24 Hours of Daytona soon became one of the most prestigious endurance races in the world.
After the events of 1959, open wheel racing cars rarely took to the track at Daytona, with the exception of some special test sessions and amateur-level club racing, which takes place exclusively on the combined road course. In 1974, A. J. Foyt tested an Indy car at Talladega Superspeedway, which is steeper, wider, and longer (2.66 miles) than Daytona. Foyt set a new record of 217.854 mph. [70] [71] In 1980, USAC tentatively scheduled a race at Talladega, [72] [73] but it was cancelled before it could be run. [74]
On March 12, 2009, eight restored vintage Indy roadsters took exhibition parade laps around the Daytona International Speedway oval, celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of the 100-mile USAC race. The parade laps, led by Hurley Haywood, featured five of the original restored cars from the 1959 race, and race winner Jim Rathmann was in attendance. The exhibition was a prelude to the Concours d'Elegance being held in Jacksonville. [75]
In 1984, and in 2006–2007, respectively, there have been three open wheel, professional-level test sessions conducted at Daytona, all three of which were on the combined road course. To-date, however, there has never been another race held. In 2016, the Ferrari Finali Mondiali event was held on the Daytona road course. Sebastian Vettel and Kimi Raikkonen took demonstration laps around the course in Scuderia Ferrari Formula One machines. [75]
After the USAC race was discontinued, Bill France put up a $10,000 cash prize for the first driver to complete a lap at over 180 mph at Daytona. Car builder Bob Osiecki took a 1958 Kurtis Kraft Indy roadster and installed a supercharged 460 cu. in. Chrysler V8 engine. The highly modified Indy roadster was fitted with aircraft-style wings on the sides and on the tail, and was given the nickname the "Mad Dog IV." [76] Several drivers reportedly tested the car in the spring and summer, and Osiecki eventually settled on driver Art Malone to attempt to break the 180 mph barrier, and set a new closed-course speed record in the process. [77]
In July 1961, Malone began taking laps on the Daytona oval in the Mad Dog IV. His initial test laps (sans airfoils) were in the 161 mph range. The machine had been plagued by oil pressure issues due to the high speeds pushing the oil away from the oil pump. The crew was able to solve the problem by moving the oil pump to the rear of the oil pan, and adjusted the amount of oil in the crankcase. In addition, the team was using old tires left over from the Monza race, all of which wearing out after only a couple laps at speed. [78] On August 5, 1961, Malone turned a lap at 177.479 mph, a new track record, and a new world closed-course competitive track record. It broke the mark set by Tony Bettenhausen (177.038 mph) at Monza in 1957. [79] One day later, on August 6, Malone went out for another attempt, but suffered a seized transmission. The car broke into a spin, slid 600 feet, but made no contact. The crew took the car back to Charlotte, North Carolina for an overhaul, and planned to return later in the month. [80]
On August 21, Art Malone and the team returned for another attempt. He upped his record to 178.253 mph. On August 27, he turned a lap of 178.571 mph, just four tenths of a second shy of the elusive 180 mph barrier. [81] On Monday August 28, with about 350 spectators in attendance, Malone finally succeeded, officially breaking the 180 mph barrier, the first driver ever to do so at Daytona International Speedway. At approximately 4:00 p.m., Malone made two slow warm up laps, then turned a fast lap of 175.079 mph. His fourth lap was clocked at 49.59 seconds, for an average speed of 181.561 mph. It was a new world competitive closed course record, and a new track record that would stand for seven years. [82] Malone's trap speed on the straightaway was estimated at over 220 mph. Malone nearly crashed after he crossed the finish line, as the car began to fishtail back and forth. He was able to safely bring the car under control, and returned to the pits where he received accolades from the spectators and press, and was later presented with the $10,000 check. [83]
On July 5, 1968, one day after the Firecracker 400, Indy driver Jim Hurtubise drove a front-engine roadster for a test-run at Daytona. His lap of 191.938 mph was a new track record and a closed-course speed record. He was the first driver to complete a lap Daytona with an average speed of over 190 mph. [84]
In January 1984, a secret Formula One Goodyear tire test was held on the Daytona International Speedway combined road course. Lotus and Williams were on hand to test out new F1 radial tires. [85] [86] [87] [88] Nigel Mansell was one of the drivers that participated.
On September 26–27, 2006, the IRL IndyCar Series held a compatibility test on the Daytona International Speedway combined road course. It was the first time Indy cars had driven at the track since 1959. The test was used to evaluate the track as a possible warm-weather testing venue (and perhaps a future racing venue), and also to test new engines for 2007. [89] The test utilized a 10-turn, 2.73-mile (4.39 km) road course layout, which was a modified version of the motorcycle short course. The series avoided the full 3.56-mile 24 Hours course due to concerns about speeds, and the abrupt transition out of turn two onto the backstretch.
Vítor Meira was the first driver on the track. [90] The other drivers that participated were Sam Hornish Jr., Tony Kanaan, Scott Dixon, and Dan Wheldon. [91]
No incidents were reported on the first day. On the second day, Sam Hornish Jr. spun in the chicane and backed into a tire barrier. Later in the day, Vítor Meira hit the SAFER Barrier at the exit of the chicane. Both drivers were uninjured. [92]
On the second day of the test, the drivers briefly experimented with a 12-turn 2.95-mile (4.75 km) layout, which slightly reworked part of the infield segment. [92] The teams, drivers, and officials were pleased with the successful results of the test, and were openly considering adding the track as a venue for open testing, and possibly a race in the future. [93]
On January 31-February 1, 2007, the IRL IndyCar Series returned for a second off-season compatibility test on the Daytona International Speedway combined road course. This test was held on the 10-turn, 2.73-mile (4.39 km) road course layout used the previous September, and featured seventeen drivers from nine different teams. [94]
On the first day, Scott Sharp was the first driver on the track. Hélio Castroneves led the practice speeds during the morning session (1:13.3254). Tony Kanaan set the fastest lap of the day, and of the test, during the afternoon session. Several drivers had off-track skids, but no major incidents were reported. [95]
On the second day, Hélio Castroneves set the fastest lap (1:12.6128) but did not eclipse the best lap from the day before. Scott Sharp was involved in the lone incident of the day. Exiting the chicane at the end of the backstretch, Sharp spun into a tire barrier, damaging the rear wing. Rain started falling at about 3:00 p.m., and all teams decided to park their machines for the rest of the day. [96]
The 17 drivers completed nearly 1,700 laps without major incident. [97] Tony Kanaan topped the session with the fastest single lap. [98] After the test, speculation began to grow about a possible IndyCar race in the future. [99] However, no official announcements were made.
Pos | No. | Driver | Team | Time | Speed |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 11 | Tony Kanaan | Andretti Green | 1:12.239 | 135.549 |
2 | 3 | Hélio Castroneves | Team Penske | 1:12.354 | 135.335 |
3 | 10 | Dan Wheldon | Target Chip Ganassi | 1:12.412 | 135.226 |
4 | 27 | Dario Franchitti | Andretti Green | 1:12.461 | 135.134 |
5 | 6 | Sam Hornish Jr. | Team Penske | 1:12.503 | 135.056 |
6 | 9 | Scott Dixon | Target Chip Ganassi | 1:12.837 | 134.438 |
7 | 4 | Vítor Meira | Panther Racing | 1:12.993 | 134.149 |
8 | 26 | Marco Andretti | Andretti Green | 1:13.136 | 133.887 |
9 | 8 | Scott Sharp | Rahal Letterman | 1:13.373 | 133.456 |
10 | 17 | Jeff Simmons | Rahal Letterman | 1:13.481 | 133.260 |
11 | 55 | Kosuke Matsuura | Panther Racing | 1:13.621 | 133.006 |
12 | 22 | A. J. Foyt IV | Vision Racing | 1:13.723 | 132.821 |
13 | 2 | Tomas Scheckter | Vision Racing | 1:13.811 | 132.663 |
14 | 14 | Darren Manning | A. J. Foyt Racing | 1:14.112 | 132.124 |
15 | 15 | Buddy Rice | Dreyer & Reinbold Racing | 1:14.314 | 131.766 |
16 | 7 | Danica Patrick | Andretti Green | 1:14.382 | 131.645 |
17 | 20 | Ed Carpenter | Vision Racing | 1:14.838 | 130.843 |
Since the 2007 test, the IndyCar Series to-date has not returned for another test at Daytona. Though the track was completely resurfaced in 2010, and numerous other safety improvements have been made in the years since, the series has not publicly expressed interest in returning.
The 24 Hours of Daytona, also known as the Rolex 24 At Daytona for sponsorship reasons, is a 24-hour sports car endurance race held annually at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida. It is run on the Sports Car Course layout, a 3.56-mile (5.73 km) combined road course that uses most of the tri-oval plus an infield road course. Held on the last weekend of January or first weekend of February as part of Speedweeks, it is the first major automobile race of the year in North America. The race is sanctioned by IMSA and is the first race of the season for the IMSA SportsCar Championship.
The Brickyard 400 is an annual NASCAR Cup Series points race held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana. The inaugural race was held in 1994 and was the first race other than the Indianapolis 500 to be held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway since 1916. In its inaugural running, the Brickyard 400 became NASCAR's most-attended event, drawing an estimated crowd of more than 250,000 spectators. The race also paid one of NASCAR's highest purses. From 1994 to 2020, the race was held on the 2.5-mile oval, for a distance of 400 miles. The race was put on hiatus for three years (2021–2023) in favor of the Verizon 200 at the Brickyard which was run on a combined road course and run a distance of 200-mile (321.869 km). The event returned to the oval for the 2024 season.
The 37th International 500-Mile Sweepstakes was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Saturday, May 30, 1953. The event was part of the 1953 AAA National Championship, and was race 2 of 9 in the 1953 World Championship of Drivers. Bill Vukovich, after falling just short a year before, dominated the race, leading 195 of the 200 laps. Vukovich won the first of two consecutive "500" victories, finishing more than three minutes ahead of second place Art Cross.
The 38th International 500-Mile Sweepstakes was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Monday, May 31, 1954. The event was part of the 1954 AAA National Championship Trail, and was also race 2 of 9 in the 1954 World Championship of Drivers.
The 39th International 500-Mile Sweepstakes was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Monday, May 30, 1955. The event was race 1 of 11 of the 1955 AAA National Championship Trail and was race 3 of 7 in the 1955 World Championship of Drivers.
The 40th International 500-Mile Sweepstakes was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Wednesday, May 30, 1956. The event was part of the 1956 USAC National Championship Trail and was also race 3 of 8 in the 1956 World Championship of Drivers. The 1956 race was the first to be governed by the United States Automobile Club. The AAA withdrew from auto racing the previous August after a succession of incidents, including the Le Mans disaster and the fatal crash of Bill Vukovich during the 1955 race. Another change was made to the track that would have an immediate effect on the racing. The vast majority of the circuit was paved over in asphalt. A short stretch approximately 600 yards in length was left brick along the mainstretch. Speeds were expected to climb, and qualifying records were expected to be shattered during time trials.
The 41st International 500-Mile Sweepstakes was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Thursday, May 30, 1957. The event was part of the 1957 USAC National Championship Trail and it was the third race of the eight-race 1957 World Championship of Drivers.
The 42nd International 500-Mile Sweepstakes was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Friday, May 30, 1958. The event was part of the 1958 USAC National Championship Trail, and was also race 4 of 11 in the 1958 World Championship of Drivers.
The 44th International 500-Mile Sweepstakes was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana on Monday, May 30, 1960. The event was race 2 of 12 of the 1960 USAC National Championship Trail and was also race 3 of 10 in the 1960 World Championship of Drivers. It would be the final time World Championship points would be awarded at the Indy 500.
Paul Edward Goldsmith is a retired American racing driver. During his career he raced motorcycles, stock cars, and Indianapolis cars, achieving success in each discipline.
George Reggie "Little George" Amick was an American racecar driver, mainly competing in the American National Championship. He was killed in a crash in a USAC 100-mile (160 km) race at Daytona International Speedway.
Royal Richard "Jim" Rathmann, was an American racing driver who competed primarily in Championship Cars. Rathmann is best known for winning the Indianapolis 500 in 1960, emerging victorious after a race-long duel with Rodger Ward - as recently as 2023, a panel of fans and historians voted Rathmann's victory as the greatest '500' of all time. In Europe he is well-known for winning the 1958 Race of Two Worlds.
Marshall Pleasant Teague was an American race car driver nicknamed by NASCAR fans as the "King of the Beach" for his performances at the Daytona Beach Road Course.
The 49th International 500-Mile Sweepstakes was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana on Monday, May 31, 1965.
The 47th International 500-Mile Sweepstakes was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana on Thursday, May 30, 1963. Rufus Parnelli Jones took his only Indy 500 win. This win was controversial because his car spewed oil from a cracked overflow tank for many laps, which allegedly caused at least one driver to spin and crash. USAC officials put off black-flagging Jones after car owner J. C. Agajanian ran down pit lane and convinced them that the oil leak was below the level of a known crack and would not leak any further. Lotus owner Colin Chapman, whose English-built, rear-engined Lotus-Ford finished second in the hands of Scotsman Jim Clark, accused USAC officials of being biased in favor of the American driver and car.
The 16th International 500-Mile Sweepstakes Race was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Wednesday, May 30, 1928. This was the first Indianapolis 500 presided over by new Speedway president Eddie Rickenbacker. Rain threatened to wash out the day, but the showers stopped and the race started on time. One brief shower slowed the race around the 400-mile mark, bringing out the yellow flag for a few laps.
The 70th Indianapolis 500 was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana on Saturday, May 31, 1986. After being rained out on May 25–26, the race was rescheduled for the following weekend. Bobby Rahal was the winner, becoming the first driver in Indy history to complete the 500 miles (800 km) in less than three hours. At an average speed of 170.722 mph (274.750 km/h), it was the fastest 500-mile Indy car race to that point.
The 1994 Brickyard 400 was held on Saturday, August 6, 1994, at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The race marked the nineteenth race of the 1994 NASCAR Winston Cup Series season. It was the first NASCAR stock car race at the famous Speedway and the first race of any kind held at the track beside the Indianapolis 500 since the Harvest Classic in 1916. The race featured the largest crowd in NASCAR history, and a then NASCAR record purse of $3.2 million.
The 1959 USAC Championship Car season consisted of 13 races, beginning in Daytona Beach, Florida on April 4 and concluding in Sacramento, California on October 25. There were also three non-championship events. The USAC National Champion and Indianapolis 500 winner was Rodger Ward. In this tragic season 7 fatal accidents occurred. During the pre-season, Marshall Teague was fatally injured in a crash at Daytona. He was 37 years old. In the first race of the season at Daytona, 34-year-old George Amick was killed in an accident on the last lap. In the second race of the season at Trenton, Dick Linder was killed; he was 36 years old. The third race of the season, the Indy 500, had two fatalities. On May 2, Jerry Unser was killed in a practice accident, and on May 19 death Bob Cortner was also killed in a practice accident. On July 19 at Mechanicsburg in the Indianapolis Sweepstakes non-championship race Van Johnson was killed in an accident; he was 32 years old. On August 30, 32-year-old Ed Elisian was killed at the Milwaukee Mile. The 1959 season could be considered one of the most tragic seasons in American open-wheel car history.
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