|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
Greg Moore who was born and raised in Spartanburg, South Carolina,
one of three sons of NASCAR Hall of Famer Bud Moore. Bud Moore is a
highly decorated World War II veteran who landed on Utah Beach on
D-Day. Greg lived in an auto racer's world in which his father's
cars and drivers won dozens of races and back to back
championships. Those drivers were Greg's friends, and two died in
racing crashes within a year when he was 6 to 7 years old. Greg
chose racing over college and went to work in his father's
business, staying there for the next 25 years. He worked especially
with racing engines and became team manager for such winning
drivers as Bobby Allison, Dale Earnhardt, Ricky Rudd, and Geoff
Bodine until Bud Moore Engineering was sold in 2000. Greg
accompanies his father everywhere making personal appearances with
other celebrities and was present in 2010 when Bud Moore was voted
into the NASCAR Hall of Fame, its 10th member. Greg's personal
recollections of a life that others could only dream of from
childhood to adulthood gives fascinating insight into the world of
big time stock car racing.
Independent stock car racers rarely won, often crashed, and flirted
with death constantly, all for less money and fame than the
money-backed star drivers of their day. This book includes
interviews with 12 independent racers, including Curtis "Crawfish"
Crider, "Jackhandle Joe" Frasson, and Gene "The Racing Marine"
Hobby, among others. Laying the foundation for stock car racing as
we know it, most of these racers plied their trade during the
sport's early years, when racing required little more than a helmet
and a great deal of courage. Readers will discover how each of
these men managed to survive and stand out in their sport, despite
running on second-hand or inferior equipment, receiving little to
no outside support, and, in many cases, holding down another job
off-track. The book is supplemented with more than 100 photographs,
many from the personal collections of the author and the racers.]
Storming the beach at Normandy 70 years ago, little did a 19-year
old farm boy Spartanburg, South Carolina, know the incredible times
that were in store for him. Fighting for his country at war, Bud
Moore earned five Purple Hearts, two Bronze Stars, captured with
his jeep driver in enemy headquarters of more than 30 German
officers and soldiers, and survived to return home and launch a
career of enormous fame and wealth. Beginning as one of NASCAR
stock car racing's true pioneers, Bud Moore won countless races in
the rough and tumble days of the sport and continued on to win
three Grand National Championships, a Grand American Championship,
and the Sports Car Club of America Trans Am Championship. He won
all those while victorious in three Southern 500s, the Daytona 500,
and dozens of other major NASCAR events. A Who's Who of America's
best drivers have chauffeured Bud Moore machines such as Buck
Baker, Buddy Baker, Joe Weatherly, Joe Eubanks, Bobby Allison,
David Pearson, Dan Gurney, Parnelli Jones, George Follmer, Lloyd
Ruby, Tiny Lund, Darel Dieringer, Billy Wade, Peter Revson, Geoff
Bodine, Jack Smith, Speedy Thompson, Fireball Roberts, and many
many more. But racing also had a very high price as in less than a
year his drivers Joe Weatherly and Billy Wade made the ultimate
sacrifice of being killed in their primes piloting Bud Moore
racecars. So ever since he entered the sport, Bud Moore continued
to find ways to improve the cars making them not only faster, but
safer. His innovations were immediately adopted by NASCAR and the
automobile manufacturers and many are still in use today. Bud Moore
did it all while providing for his wife of 63 years and helping
raise three wonderful boys. Very few men or women have had the
opportunity to serve their country and excel in their chosen field
as did Bud Moore has. Now a gentleman farmer, he tells it all here;
the danger and the daring, the heartbreak and the triumph, and the
winning the ultimate honor that his sport can bestow.
NASCAR held its first Strictly Stock race in Charlotte on June 19,
1949, and, in the following decades, dozens of large and small
tracks throughout the Carolinas were home to a major NASCAR event.
Called Grand National from 1950-1970, NASCAR's top circuit became
the Winston Cup in 1971, and most of the dirt and small tracks were
subsequently gutted from the schedule. Although a handful of those
speedways tenuously held on through exploding popularity, and an
influx of big corporate dollars, the transition to metropolitan
markets and super speedways was inevitable. Some of the original
tracks, like the North Wilkesboro Motor Speedway, still stand
testament to the sport's not-too-distant past. Others, like the
Charlotte Speedway, are long gone, leaving only memories and
photographs. This is the story of every racetrack in North and
South Carolina that held at least one big time race through 1971,
but is no longer used for auto racing. Seven are one-race wonders,
while others are as much racing legends as the sport's past
champions. Chapters cover each track's big time history, from early
background through its racing years to its current status. Included
are the thrilling tales of the personalities and machines that
shaped NASCAR's early days. Statistics chart every track's past
winners, records, and wins by make. Nearly 150 photographs give the
reader a virtual tour of speedways that are often inaccessible or
nonexistent.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|