Blogs > Nascar: Beyond the Track
Find out what's really going on in NASCAR. Look here to find out why your driver really lost his ride, or the real reason those two drivers can't stand each other. Learn about the hidden motives and reasons for the things that happen in NASCAR, from the drivers to the team owners.
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Through stock car racing’s rough and tumble, formative years Everett
“Cotton” Owens stood out for a multitude of reasons: among them, winning
driver and owner and master mechanic.
But perhaps most of all, he was a gentleman.
“He
was such a nice guy, one of the nicest I ever drove for,” said David
Pearson,
whose first of three NASCAR Sprint Cup championships was won in 1966 at
the wheel of Owens’ No. 6 Dodge. “He was a real smart, sensible man.
They (his competitors) liked him as much as he liked them. If somebody
wanted to know something, he’d answer them.”
Owens,
who died last June at the age of 88, will join Pearson in the NASCAR
Hall
of Fame on Friday, Feb. 8 as one of five members of the Hall’s fourth
class. His fellow 2013 inductees are NASCAR premier series champions
Buck Baker, Rusty Wallace and Herb Thomas and master crew chief Leonard
Wood.
Known
as
the “King of the Modifieds” for more than 100 victories, the Union, S.C.
native was part of the post-war racing scene around Spartanburg, S.C.
Among the key figures were Owens, NASCAR Hall of Famer Bud Moore and
1960 NASCAR premier series champion Rex White.
Owens’
NASCAR
premier series driving career spanned 15 years – 160 races, nine
victories and a second-place championship finish to NASCAR Hall of Famer
Lee Petty in 1959. His first victory, in 1957 marked the first time a
NASCAR Sprint Cup race was run on Daytona’s Beach
& Road Course at an average speed of more than 100 mph – 101.541 mph
to be exact. The win also was the first in the series by a Pontiac.
For much
of his driving career, the 5-feet, 5-inch Owens raced with double vision, the result of a racing accident in 1951.
“The people
I drove against, they didn’t know I couldn’t see them,” Owens said in a 1984 interview.
NASCAR
Hall
of Famer Richard Petty recalled, “He was super on dirt … one of the
better guys who raced on the dirt tracks. When he became a car owner, he
really helped the cars get better. He was a good mind in doing some new
things in the sport.”
Faced
with
diminishing depth perception coupled with the need for his cars to
perform on superspeedways, Owens began his transition to
owner/builder/crew chief. His cars won 38 times, the last in 1971 in a
Daytona 500 qualifying race – which at the time awarded NASCAR
premier series points – by Pete Hamilton.
Among
those
who drove cars fielded by Owens were NASCAR Hall of Famers Junior
Johnson and Bobby Allison, Glenn “Fireball” Roberts, Marvin Panch, Bobby
Isaac, Ralph Earnhardt, Charlie Glotzbach, Mario Andretti and Al Unser.
Buddy
Baker
drove perhaps Owens’ most iconic entry – the orange and black No. 6
winged Dodge Daytona in which Baker recorded the first NASCAR-sanctioned
200 mph lap at Talladega Superspeedway on March 24, 1970. Baker
subsequently dominated Talladega’s spring event, turning
the first in-race lap of 200 mph, before a spin and accident sidelined
the rapid Dodge just past half-distance.
Baker recorded
13 top-five finishes in 29 starts for Owens during the 1969-70 seasons winning the 1970 Southern 500.
Allison
also won in an Owens car as did Glotzbach. Owens won six times in his own equipment between 1960 and 1964.
The
match
that sealed one hall of fame career and began another was the pairing of
Owens and Pearson, longtime friends and dirt track competitors. Pearson
recalls dropping by Owens’ garage in late 1962. Owens was thinking of
running more races the following season and
wondered if Pearson would like to be his driver.
“Back
then
I’d have driven for nothing,” said Pearson, who lived three miles from
Owens in a recent interview. “I didn’t have a regular car. He asked if
I’d like to run more races. It was the first factory ride I’d ever had. I
knew I’d be in the best equipment.”
Pearson
and
Owens were winless in 1963 but reached Victory Lane eight times in 61
races in 1964 and finished third in the standings. Pearson and Owens won
twice in 1965, both on dirt tracks, while working on chassis set ups
that proved of championship quality in 1966.
They raced a Dodge Dart station wagon drag car called the “Cotton
Picker” that had the engine mounted in the cargo compartment.
In
1966,
Owens and Pearson won the championship with 15 victories in 42 starts –
including a road race win at Bridgehampton, N.Y. They finished nearly
80% of the races in the top 10 to give Dodge its first NASCAR title.
Twenty-seven
of Pearson’s 105 NASCAR Sprint Cup victories came in Owens-owned and prepared cars. The relationship was truly a congenial one.
“He was
not like a boss; it was like working for a friend,” said Pearson. “We just had a great time working together.”
Although
Pearson
left the team the following year to drive for Holman Moody, where he
won two more titles in 1968-69, he remained close to his former car
owner until Owens’ passing.
“I’d pick
up Cotton and his wife (Dot) after church and we’d all go to lunch,” he said of a decades-long Sunday routine.
Induction
ceremonies will take place at 7:30 p.m. ET in the Crown Ball Room at
the Charlotte Convention Center which is directly connected to the
NASCAR Hall of Fame. The event is the first half of NASCAR Acceleration
Weekend followed on Saturday, Feb. 9 by NASCAR Preview 2013. Tickets for
the ceremonies start at $45 (available at www.nascaracceleration.com)
and the NASCAR Hall of Fame box office. In addition, a $20 ticket will
gain fans all-day access into NASCAR Preview 2013 and the NASCAR Hall of
Fame on Saturday, Feb. 9.
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