Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: SATURDAY, August 6, 1994 TAG: 9408090033 SECTION: SPORTS PAGE: B-1 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: By BOB ZELLER STAFF WRITER DATELINE: INDIANAPOLIS LENGTH: Medium
NASCAR has come to Indy, and so far it has been quite a show.
Unheralded Rick Mast is on the pole in a Ford Thunderbird, but sitting right there beside him, in that ominous black Chevrolet, is Dale Earnhardt, the best of the best.
The weather apparently will be perfect for this first Winston Cup series event at the world's oldest and greatest race track. The forecast is for clear skies and temperatures in the 70s, as if providence has put on its best face for the historic 160-lap show.
``Everybody is going to be pumped up and the adrenaline is going to be flowing,'' said A.J. Foyt, the crusty legend who came through in the clutch Friday during second-round qualifying to capture the 40th starting spot. ``I think you'll see a lot of sheet metal flying.''
Forty years ago, the idea of a NASCAR race at this racing shrine brought shudders, if not disgust, to the Indy faithful. But times have changed, NASCAR has matured and Indy will now have more than one annual race for the first time since 1910, a year before the first Indianapolis 500.
If you have any doubts whether race fans wanted to see this happen, you needed to be here Friday afternoon for the first minutes of the final Winston Cup practice, when a long line of stock cars, running bumper-to-bumper, came flying down the front stretch and throttled down to enter the first turn.
As serious as it was, this was still only practice. But fans were screaming and pumping their fists and cheering them on. It almost looked like the real thing.
If Daytona International Speedway was the greatest achivement of late Bill France, the founder of NASCAR, then history will surely judge this new race as the single greatest legacy of his son, NASCAR President Bill France, Jr.
``I don't think any race driver in the Winston Cup series at some point wouldn't have liked to run at Indy,'' France said. ``They didn't have a chance. Now they do.''
But the Brickyard 400 wouldn't have happened without the support and encouragement of speedway president Tony George, who carried none of the prejudices of his elders and liked what he saw when he first attended a NASCAR race.
This race was a sellout about 48 hours after tickets went on sale. More than 300,000 people are expected to attend - far more than any previous NASCAR race.
``I didn't know it was going to be this big, but I knew it was going to be big,'' said George. ``No one here in the organization thought it was going to be this big.''
``I think it's probably the most anticipated race in NASCAR history, with the possible exception of the [first] Southern 500 at Darlington in 1950 and the 250-mile in Detroit in 1951, which took NASCAR to the doorstep of the automobile industry,'' said stock car racing historian Greg Fielden.
``I think this ranks bigger than the first Daytona 500 in 1959,'' he said. ``Daytona was almost too big for racing's britches back then. And the beach races at Daytona before 1959 always held interest.''
Although Mast has never won a Winston Cup race, he set the pace in testing here and continued to be the quickest in practice. It was no different in the final Winston Cup practice, when the best of his 18 laps was 170.165 mph.
But Mast is concerned.
``The fans will see a lot of accidents if a lot of guys don't use their heads getting in the four turns,'' he said Friday afternoon.
Mast and 11 other drivers will be using Hoosier tires in the race. The rest of the 43-car field will use Goodyears.
``I think history will show us as we go down the road that this is the most significant thing that's ever happened to this sport,'' Darrell Waltrip said. ``It's not going to be a small step. It's going to be a great big leap forward for Winston Cup racing.
``I don't know any other way to say it, but this is a big deal.''
Keywords:
AUTO RACING
by CNB