Open faced helmets, concrete retaining walls with paint missing, rusting retaining fence, 200mph steel cages surrounded by sheet metal flying around track, cigarettes, Confederate flags waving in the breeze.......this is when racing was racing my friends. God I miss it. Thank you for uploading these old races.
I agree..with everything but the confederate flags..the confederate traitors entire leadership should have been hung publicly for leading So many to their deaths. I think if it happened today you would agree and want the same...Lincoln showed a TON of restraint
i thank god for safe walls and the hans...i had that idea before its advent but could not figure out where to tether my helmet too great safty inovation cars could have been safe back 60s 70s i dont get it why werent window nets a no brainer
@@jaydesrochers3276 Buzz kill Jay that makes everything into something terrible and evil. We learn from our past dumb ass. The rebel flag is thought of Southern pride by the majority of people. Nobody saying hang black people and tear the country apart now or during the race in the video. Of course my comment to you is pointless because you will always be a troll asshole spew your bs.
I live in the southern U.S. I began watching NASCAR in the late 1970s. I'm not a fan anymore. NASCAR is absolute crap, for many reasons. Darrell Waltrip was definitely one of my favorite drivers.
Awesome Bill from Dawsonville! That Tbird had wings in those days! This is how things should have stayed just add the safer barrier and hans device and let them run flat out! Miss those days!
On the small tracks he was no better than anybody else. What made him so good on the big track was those two years he was allowed to run a 351 Cleveland because NASCAR had a rule and I'm pretty sure it was $ 357 in³ but the rule didn't specify be blocked or small block. Common sense will tell anyone a big block will outrun a small block on the big end
I won't be long they'll be trying electric cars 😂😂 back then we had ford Chevy Buick dodge now it's Toyota ford Chevy All the rules that's why I quit watching
All the computer crap took the racing out of racing. Before it was the mechanic and the tuner, now the computer tells you what to do. Me street racing is me and my people, not some computer telling us we are stupid. What's the point of learning anything?
This is when it wasn’t just a competition between drivers. Back then it was a competition between entire teams, including mechanics and no one could build a Ford engine better than Ernie Elliot.
@@BamaShinesDistillery Nope. He just ported the heads. His Dad bought the first dyno in Nascar from Penske before Penske had even thought about running Nascar, in his Indy days. I'm sure if the Elliott's could afford a dyno they afforded a cam grinder as well.... When you're hungry you are hungry. Johnson just wished he had gotten that dyno.
Not all of them. The car’s illegality was it was physically smaller than the rules allowed; once teams finally figured this out Elliott was far less competitive
I personally prefer the new racing than old racing, todays, you can watch the race live at cell phones, you can see the big screen broadcasting the TV live
Look up Isle of Mann TT racing on youtube. It is motorcycle racing, but it is unregulated and will get your adrenaline pumping. People die every year there, but it is one of the only places left on the planet where you can see pure racing still. Trust me it is worth watching at least one time to remember just how amazing pure speed can be with no crazy rules. What the hell I will even give you all the link. th-cam.com/video/iRWp9rhfS_0/w-d-xo.html
This is awesome…the familiar iconic voices, the famous driver names (Garrett, Bodine, Elliott, Baker, Waltrip, etc…), the sponsors (Skoal Bandits, Mountain Dew, etc…), talking to the pit crew right after a pit stop, and the best part…NO RESTRICTOR PLATES!!! Those were the days.
Something to think about: I'm from Finland (yeah, the happiest country in the world) and what upsets me is that I've stopped watching and being interested in Nascar, despite the fact that I loved it from when I was a kid. Even though it was possible to watch or see something about Nascar from TV in Finland starting I think back in the 1980s (I believe Sky Channel or some other), I learned to know the drivers and the teams from that on and I even studied the history of the sport. Nowadays we have all kinds of pay TVs, cable, internet etc., but I'm not interested anymore. I don't even know most of the current drivers... I know it's impossible to go back in time, but Nascar used to rock. It was a sport of real men. I miss the good old days, the legendary cars, the legendary clashes on track and the legendary drivers. I want the original Nascar back.The same has happened with Formula One, sad to say... One more thing: my greetings to David Pearson, among the very best or perhaps even the greatest ever. Thanks for the memories.
I feel the same. Although I wasn't a Jeff Gordon fan, I stopped watching when he retired. Seemed a fitting time to end it all for me too. Been hitting up the local dirt tracks ever since. It's not like the old days of NASCAR but it is still a lot of fun. I love Finland, been there many times....Tampere, Finland.
I agree the fist fights Pearson petty Yarbrough the fire and passion they had there missed by me the NASCAR OF OLD WAS the one to watch awesome bill from Dawsonville and ernie the engine guru that to atleast a page of three from smokey yunicks book on speed yes its sad a real tragedy what has happened to NASCAR
Brought what you had and raced it. Man... I was a child and these are my first memories watching NASCAR. Bill had two nicknames already, Awesome Bill from Dawsonville and Million Dollar Bill.
BP was a great human being. I was raised about 2 miles from the Rock and he lived his whole life in the one caution light town of Ellerbe just north of Rockingham.
I've heard he lived his whole life their an ant disputing you but back in the 80s when they introduced him an his brother from Detroit Michigan an their dad owned the taxi service up their.dont no if that's true but it's how they were announced during races
He wasn't up in Michigan much after he started racing. My friend drove cab for his dad and brother. My father in law worked for Benny's sponsor as a advertising company. We got tickets to some races and I built my father in laws company a Nascar model of Benny's winning #55 Oldsmobile to display in their lobby. They loved it ,put in under lights even.
Ernie Elliott motors. His brother is one of the elite engine builders in NASCAR history. Other engineers that come to mind Smokey Yunick, Maurice Petty, the Wood Brothers, Waddell Wilson for Ranier-Lundy, Robert Yates and later his son Doug who still builds the motors for essentially all the Ford teams today, Richie Gilmore for DEI, and the late Randy Dorton for Hendrick. Michael McDowell's Daytona 500-winning car...the engine under the hood of that #34 Ford was crafted by Doug Yates. All of the Toyotas get their engines from TRD (Toyota Racing Development).
@@mattkowal90I think Ernie should be in hall of fame that's a exclusive bunch you named plus Erie won 33 times a cup crewcheif only person I can think of that has that many wins as crewcheif an 41 wins as engine builder is wadelll Wilson. ernie should be in hall of fame
@@mattkowal90 I read something somewhere that indicated the Toyota motors were more or less clones of small block Chevrolets. Anything to that or not? Thanks.
Don’t know. The Elliott car wasn’t about power. The body was physically smaller than was legal; they were able to beat the templates. Earnhardt’s guys would likewise cheat the templates the next year plus by shaving the roofline greenhouse area
Sure it was because the only thing Chevrolet had that would compete as far as cubic inches was a 350 base block. You could only run 357 cubic inches and Ford had a big block and NASCAR didn't have a rule that it had to be a small block. I've had big blocks and small blocks and I can tell you like this. From zero to a hundred miles an hour I can take a small block and eat a big block's ass but on top end stretched out as fast as we can run on a two and a half mile track a big block Cleveland could give that small block Chevrolet a two-lap head start and in 80 to 100 laps he would pass him the second time. No comparison so Bill Elliot in my opinion was never that damn great of a race car driver and that's just my opinion
@@mastercarpenter1970 Except they weren't running the 351C. What they were running was a special engine Ford had made based more on the 351W but incorporated design features of the Cleveland engine. It wasn't a big block. Those went bye bye around '74 or so when then made 358 cu in. the max displacement. You have your opinion about Bill Elliot, I disagree. Nobody ever has had a season like he did in 1985. As good as it was he didn't win the Winston Cup in '85. He had another great year in '87 when he did win it just edging Rusty Wallace in a tremendous battle the last one third of the season.
I wish they never introduced restrictor plates but downsized the carburetors instead. That would keep the competition and make it safer. RIP David Pearson 1934-2018
They did reduce the carburetors the second half of 1987. It didn’t work. People should have accepted and embraced the restrictor plates and worked to make the cars far more stuck to the track (also to make the draft unstoppable again like it is today)
The GM boys had an entire year of test&tune with restrictor plates..everyone else had but a couple months to set up their cars for that season..The restrictor plates were implemented specifically to choke power on the Ford Guys running Clevelands...GM guys crying that Fomoco had an unfair advantage
They are actually running downsized carbs in this event, the first one being the firecracker 400 at Daytona a few weeks earlier.....so they did nothing to slow the cars down
@superbird4351 I agree if the 390 4 barrel wasn't enuff of a downsize they could went two a two barrel carb or even a 1 barrel but no let's take a engine making 700 horse power an chock the air off so all the cars could keep up with bill
@@brianbooher7318 had nothing to do with keeping up with Bill, it was about keeping the cars on the ground after Allison flew into the fence and almost into the grandstands.....like le mans in 1955
Man Mike Joy is fantastic isn’t he? He started as the track announcer at riverside speedway in Agawam mass, where I first saw the sights, and smelled the smells of modifieds and late models..in fact, I will take the Whelen tour over the cup cars nowadays.
I rather watch these old races over the new Nascrap of today and besides I did miss some of these old races back then it’s a nice way to revisit and catch up remembering life of a simpler time a time before all this toxic politics of today I am so sick of it
They use to do that everywhere when it rains that was standard track drying equipment till Bruton an humpy invented the jet dryers which now have been replaced by the air titans but I always thought dragging tires was cool an it also put rubber back in track that had been washed away.
@@brianbooher7318 - They now need to invent a vacuum cleaner for marbles so outside racing lines alive get revived (or at least bettered) during caution periods!
Those cars were so cool, beautiful and very fast. And, they were built better/ tougher and could take a beating better than today's NASCAR cars. I wish it was still like this today. 😟☹️😩
When the drivers had balls of steel, their women loved them for it, and NASCAR didn't regulate EVERY FREAKIN THING! Racing was racing...today's crap is unwatchable...
Watch the Isle of Mann TT racing if you want to see the only real unregulated racing left on the planet. Several people die a year there though and have something like over 200 have died since it started. I still enjoy watching real racing with few rules though. It is motorcycle racing, but it will get your adrenaline rushing just watching it as they scream at near 200MPH on narrow country island roads.
I missed this race on TV. I was 16 and working on Sundays pumping gas at a FULL-SERVICE gas station. Remember those? They went extinct when *good racing* did.
my first job, all the way through highschool, was working at a full service conoco station. filled er up, washed the bugs off the glass and checked the oil if you wanted!
@@ghomerhust Yes, I took pride in my skill with the squeegee, but that didn't stop the occasional, "you missed a spot" customer. Sorry, ma'am, that is a chip, not a bug. Yes, that's a chip also.
My Mama would have driven to where you worked just to get gas. She HATED pumping her own gas! Of course she started driving in 1954 when there was no such thing as a self-service gas station!
At 57:00 or so listen carefully as Bobby Allison accelerates out of the pits....you can hear the car in the background as the announcers are talking....it sounds awesome, and I miss that exhaust tone!!
It was his penultimate career win, he would win his final later that year at the National 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Notice I didn't spoil it! That means it could be anyone, but who? Find out by watching the whole race.
Well, not spoiled totally, but partly. I guessed immediately who it was after seeing your comment. I always seem to screw up my viewing experience by scrolling down to see the comments. Should have already learned not to after so many times.
@@backporchdriver3763 Finished 10th, then finished 7th the next year substituting for his good buddy Neil Bonnett in the 12. Somehow he avoided his Father's accident in T1 on the final lap.
These superspeedway races for a few years all had the same sponsor and name, the we're all the elliot 500. Nobody in same league, there has never been and never will be a car that dominant again.
Had nascsr not changed so many rules to let gm catch up elliots would won alot more.nascar did everything that they could to catch gm up even let them stick that bubble they call the areo coupe which is nuthing more than a areo dynamics band aid nascar gave gm jus to keep up with the elliots.
@@mrnascar9129 absolutely had Nascar made the manufacturer run what they built an not restricted them it would been 1990 atleasy before anyone would have touched the Elliott even if they jus run what they were running here in 85 but the gace the gm cars them aero dynamic band aid cars in 86 .
I'd rather watch these old races than what their calling nascar racing now. These dudes were balls to the walls....no restrictor plates...just cool heads and heavy feet...and you gotta love how badass these stock cars look...sitting low and mean..
It's who's left after all the stupidten car pile-ups nd the 'big one' everybody's waiting for, usually some back marker who gets lucky,there's your winner, not for me.
Shows how dam strong that car was I heard Greg sack bragin about beating bill in firecracker 85 which he did but they forget to mention bill had to pit with a couple laps To go an Greg stretched his fuel so its not like he out run bill..bill made up over 5 miles at Winston 5pp an his twin 125 at Daytona in 85 he laped entire field except 2nd place waltrip an he was almost 40 seconds behind an would been laped in another 2 laps thats getting it done in a 125
@@brianbooher7318bill also had a severe vibration because of a bent drive shaft. If not for that and a pit stop near the end, the world would have never heard of Greg Sacks
An estimated 35k was on hand for the 2019 California race. Was more like 25k to 28k. Please Nascar stop the Chase silliness so we can have a true season champ. Bring back a race at the Rock or N wilkesboro. Drop Cali or Indy. Sorry guys but I have to watch old races to get my fix now and it's not right.
The Rock was dull the last eight years it ran. North Wilkesboro is the LEAST competitive track in NASCAR history - just seven lead changes per race (the road courses used to average nine; it’s ticked upward to 11-12 lead changes per race the last few years). We need to stop kidding ourselves and admit a lot of changes have been good (certainly not all like radial tires, the raindrop body style without coke bottle and long snout wedge body styles as competition, lack of downforce and stupid warring against downforce, shifting on ovals, no real points value given to wins and most laps led)
Clever is correct. They did what every racer in history has tried to do, they found a loophole in the rules and brilliantly engineered an engine that, within the rules, could not be beaten. Especially with that slippery Ford Thunderbird body to complete the idea.
Bill's T-Bird was the same size as every other T-Bird in the field, and fit all the template measurements of that time. The "downsized car" story is nothing but a farcical urban legend....
Cleveland Engine with clever Ernie Elliott engineering! And Bill's car fit the templates, so you GM fans can cry all you want but he whupped yer asses in 1985 big time!
@@knobdikker not only whipped their asses he sent them home crying to their mommies he was unbelievable that year they talk about him making up 5 miles under green I think him lapping the entire field expt 2 place waltripin his twin 125 an he'd laped him in 2 more laps in his he won by 40 seconds in his twin 125
Oh yes it did. There was no competition in 1985 and this is dreadful and worthless as any kind if competition accomplishment. Make the draft universally effective.
In 85 the only guy who could really run with the 9 was Cale. And that was only occasionally. When the 9 was on...it was untouchable. Wadell Wilson knew how to screw together a Windsor about as good as Ernie knew how to put together a Cleavor. And the GM boys needed rule changes or they were just running for fastest in-brand.
Yes Cale was about the only real competition in those days! If bill was on there was nothing they could do with him! They just had that motor and body chiseled to perfection!! Not to mention a fantastic driver behind the wheel! If their short track program had been even remotely close they would have won at least three or four championships!!
Hell nascar let them alter their whole back half of their car .gm called it the areo coupe but in all reality it waz jus an areo dynamics band aid nascar gave gm jus to keep up with the elliots
@@toddjohnson7133 yea jus enuff to let them alter the 86 race car with that areo dynamic band aid back window simply to keep bill from lapping the field on the big tracks.
Still a bit of dampness on the track when the green finally fell. Today's drivers would poop their pants at the thought. "We can't race. My Daddy spent a lot of his trucking/construction company money to buy me this ride!"
Finished 10th in his debut, then 7th the next year substituting for Neil Bonnett after he was injured in a crash at Pocono the week prior in the Junior Johnson #12. A year and half after this he won his first Cup race, and followed it up with wins there in 1989 and 1992.
@@coca-colatrackhousewarrior9925 19 wins in 191 starts too, so just under a 10% winning average. Probably 9.999%. Includes 3 Winston 500's, 1992 Daytona 500, 1989 Pepsi 400, unfortunately didn't the Talladega 500, and quite a few road course wins.
Ned Jarrett had several shows where he stated that most of the top contenders were around 875hp. But Ernie Elliott's engine package was cooling the heads down and was reaching 13.9:1 compression because of being slightly cooler. The best of the rest was only getting 13:1 barely. He guessed by math that Bill was sitting on 925hp or so. Many will say BS to the 875hp, but just remember a Hellcat @707hp wouldn't really hit but about 186 mph. These cars are lighter, but way less aerodynamic than a Hellcat. They were talking about Ernie had a cam and heads that no one else had. Well His Dad had bought a Penske Racing dyno back in 79-80 and started work on the 351 cleveland. I am sure his Dad had a cam grinder as well, if he had the money for a dyno. As far as showing actual horsepower, I am not so sure it would tell you that. Most likely it was more of just a tuning dyno that added brake and you worked the engine to get the best mixture at certain RPM. Really a high dollar carb tuner... To this day though, I've never seen anything of Ernie saying anything about the dyno, but they way the entire Southeast was after his ass, I doubt he wanted to reveal anything while it counted...
Very good question. The answer is how did he finish in the rest of the schedule?? I wish the point system was still the same as it was in the 70s and 80s and until the playoff deal started. Playoffs are for Baseball. And they ain't but 1 Baseball team......THE NEW YORK YANKEES,,,,Period.
Bill Elliott either won or crashed. He broke his leg 3rd race of the season. Crashed at Richmond, lost his breaks at martinsville and Charlotte. Had mechanical failures at dover, wilkesboro and riverside. Ole DW was in the top 10 every single race.
@@jarflymystique6545 yes if bill had a good short track program they would have won 3 or 4 championships! They were very inconsistent on short tracks period! Plus waltrip was a master at closing races out with good finishes! It’s really sad he didn’t win the championship that year!!
I not only miss this type of racing, but I really miss this type of commentating. These guys know when to talk and when to shut up. And you don't have that annoying nasal twang of Jeff Burton.
It's a shame junior destroyed that 92 team an fired Tim brewer cause he got suppenaed by flossie in her an juniors divorce an he destroyed what was set to be a dynasty an certainly would won attest 1 cup but junior destroyed it all
I’m all for safety but they ruined the stock car part of nascar with the new safety rules. Wish they could keep the safety and bring back good old stock car racing
@@STP43FAN1 you went ,25 mph through pit road pass thru penalty, basically taking that car chances of winning going two laps down, they go too far about crap like that, oh no there's agum wrapper on the track .
Back when racing was actually still racing.... back when drivers drove the cars unlike today where the cars drive the drivers around the track. Certainly after Allison's catch fence accident in '87, the world of NASCAR started becoming a joke, with the biggest problem being with restrictor plates. And then the drivers started becoming a joke in the 2000's with Kyle Busch and Bubba Wallace topping the list of drivers who care more about their egos than their driving. Those aren't real men... people like Bobby Allison, A.J. Foyt, Richard Petty and Dale Sr. were real men.... enough said
I have many Daytona and Talladega on VHS; condition unknown. Roughly 1989 to 2000. Most should be full races; some with all commercials and some without. Would you be interested in them? All I would ask is a DVD copy for my personal collection. I know I have but not limited to the races: Earnhardt/Elliott tri-oval crash(es). The Swerving Irvin era, The HUGE wreck at the Firecracker 400 with Petty, many full Twin 125s, Waltrip's 400 crash, Martin's caution free win, etc.
Bill would have won this race had he not had a fouled spark plug. And for you Chevy whiners, two major rule changes thrown at Bill since Daytona--0.5" increased height of car, and 1/4" restrictor plate that cut the carb bore from 1-11/16" to 1-7/16"
All so much better then than now. Restrictor Plates really started the downfall of Nascar. They were invented to make the racing safer, yet there's much more crashes now than there ever was on super speedways. With all the other safety innovations since then, I say it's passed time to take the restrictor plates off!
i laugh when i hear todays drivers complain about safety or it’s hot in the car 😂😂😂 put em in one of these if you wanna make a driver outa them 😁 god i miss these days! best years of my life!
1985 made Nascar realize that excellence could not be tolerated, they decided to punish excellence in order to make all equal. Way to go Nascar, you've made us all progressives now! Bet you are searching for a Trans sexie driver aren't you? You do need a different kind of fan now right?
Its driving the GM camp mad why Fords so fast and its in plain sight and the couldn't see it. Elliott was accused of everything in the book. That made for some interesting conversations. Some got heated.
most of these come from old VHS recordings of the originally aired races, ripped onto the computer to upload. that's why you have little glitches, like VCR tracking and such.
Open faced helmets, concrete retaining walls with paint missing, rusting retaining fence, 200mph steel cages surrounded by sheet metal flying around track, cigarettes, Confederate flags waving in the breeze.......this is when racing was racing my friends. God I miss it. Thank you for uploading these old races.
I agree..with everything but the confederate flags..the confederate traitors entire leadership should have been hung publicly for leading So many to their deaths. I think if it happened today you would agree and want the same...Lincoln showed a TON of restraint
@@jaydesrochers3276 well you just made that more serious then it had to be lol
Hoytshooter 1990 I guess I did lol! From racing to the civil war....to public hangings. Wow
i thank god for safe walls and the hans...i had that idea before its advent but could not figure out where to tether my helmet too great safty inovation cars could have been safe back 60s 70s i dont get it why werent window nets a no brainer
@@jaydesrochers3276 Buzz kill Jay that makes everything into something terrible and evil. We learn from our past dumb ass. The rebel flag is thought of Southern pride by the majority of people. Nobody saying hang black people and tear the country apart now or during the race in the video. Of course my comment to you is pointless because you will always be a troll asshole spew your bs.
I'm British and I always enjoyed watching NASCAR back then. Cale and DW were my favourite drivers. Can't really say I've got one now.
I live in the southern U.S. I began watching NASCAR in the late 1970s. I'm not a fan anymore. NASCAR is absolute crap, for many reasons. Darrell Waltrip was definitely one of my favorite drivers.
Awesome Bill from Dawsonville!
That Tbird had wings in those days! This is how things should have stayed just add the safer barrier and hans device and let them run flat out! Miss those days!
NASCAR shat themselves when bobby allison almost went into the grandstands
With todays technology they’d be running 250+ lol
On the small tracks he was no better than anybody else.
What made him so good on the big track was those two years he was allowed to run a 351 Cleveland because NASCAR had a rule and I'm pretty sure it was $
357 in³ but the rule didn't specify be blocked or small block.
Common sense will tell anyone a big block will outrun a small block on the big end
I won't be long they'll be trying electric cars 😂😂 back then we had ford Chevy Buick dodge now it's Toyota ford Chevy All the rules that's why I quit watching
All the computer crap took the racing out of racing. Before it was the mechanic and the tuner, now the computer tells you what to do. Me street racing is me and my people, not some computer telling us we are stupid. What's the point of learning anything?
Racing like it out to be. Fantastic, professional broadcast crew. There will never be another like Ned Jarrett. Thanks for the memories Gentleman Ned!
Talladega this past Sunday was light years better competition
@@STP43FAN1 Daytona and Talladega are the most boring races of the year. They should be removed from the calendar.
This is when it wasn’t just a competition between drivers. Back then it was a competition between entire teams, including mechanics and no one could build a Ford engine better than Ernie Elliot.
No one cheated better than Ernie! But damn could he build em
@@BamaShinesDistillery Nope. He just ported the heads. His Dad bought the first dyno in Nascar from Penske before Penske had even thought about running Nascar, in his Indy days. I'm sure if the Elliott's could afford a dyno they afforded a cam grinder as well.... When you're hungry you are hungry.
Johnson just wished he had gotten that dyno.
@@kramnull8962 Of course he cheated, they all did back then.
Not all of them. The car’s illegality was it was physically smaller than the rules allowed; once teams finally figured this out Elliott was far less competitive
@@STP43FAN1 true
Racing the way it should be, and the announcers. Thanks for sharing. 👍
Racing seriously under competitive
@@STP43FAN1 Super competitive. Stop talking garbage.
today's racing can't compare to good ol' Winston Cup racing !
well im with you but theres a lot of single file racing in this one too
I personally prefer the new racing than old racing, todays, you can watch the race live at cell phones, you can see the big screen broadcasting the TV live
Look up Isle of Mann TT racing on youtube. It is motorcycle racing, but it is unregulated and will get your adrenaline pumping. People die every year there, but it is one of the only places left on the planet where you can see pure racing still. Trust me it is worth watching at least one time to remember just how amazing pure speed can be with no crazy rules. What the hell I will even give you all the link. th-cam.com/video/iRWp9rhfS_0/w-d-xo.html
Amen brother !
Jay Berry I disagree.
Back when NASCAR mattered, and I watched it.
On the edge of our seats almost the whole race.
This is awesome…the familiar iconic voices, the famous driver names (Garrett, Bodine, Elliott, Baker, Waltrip, etc…), the sponsors (Skoal Bandits, Mountain Dew, etc…), talking to the pit crew right after a pit stop, and the best part…NO RESTRICTOR PLATES!!! Those were the days.
Restrictor plates didn’t hurt anything
Something to think about: I'm from Finland (yeah, the happiest country in the world) and what upsets me is that I've stopped watching and being interested in Nascar, despite the fact that I loved it from when I was a kid. Even though it was possible to watch or see something about Nascar from TV in Finland starting I think back in the 1980s (I believe Sky Channel or some other), I learned to know the drivers and the teams from that on and I even studied the history of the sport. Nowadays we have all kinds of pay TVs, cable, internet etc., but I'm not interested anymore. I don't even know most of the current drivers... I know it's impossible to go back in time, but Nascar used to rock. It was a sport of real men. I miss the good old days, the legendary cars, the legendary clashes on track and the legendary drivers. I want the original Nascar back.The same has happened with Formula One, sad to say... One more thing: my greetings to David Pearson, among the very best or perhaps even the greatest ever. Thanks for the memories.
Well said.
I thought so, too...
A lot of Americans think the same way.
I feel the same. Although I wasn't a Jeff Gordon fan, I stopped watching when he retired. Seemed a fitting time to end it all for me too. Been hitting up the local dirt tracks ever since. It's not like the old days of NASCAR but it is still a lot of fun. I love Finland, been there many times....Tampere, Finland.
I agree the fist fights Pearson petty Yarbrough the fire and passion they had there missed by me the NASCAR OF OLD WAS the one to watch awesome bill from Dawsonville and ernie the engine guru that to atleast a page of three from smokey yunicks book on speed yes its sad a real tragedy what has happened to NASCAR
Brought what you had and raced it. Man... I was a child and these are my first memories watching NASCAR. Bill had two nicknames already, Awesome Bill from Dawsonville and Million Dollar Bill.
He didn't get that second name until he won the Southern 500.
BP was a great human being. I was raised about 2 miles from the Rock and he lived his whole life in the one caution light town of Ellerbe just north of Rockingham.
I've heard he lived his whole life their an ant disputing you but back in the 80s when they introduced him an his brother from Detroit Michigan an their dad owned the taxi service up their.dont no if that's true but it's how they were announced during races
He wasn't up in Michigan much after he started racing. My friend drove cab for his dad and brother. My father in law worked for Benny's sponsor as a advertising company. We got tickets to some races and I built my father in laws company a Nascar model of Benny's winning #55 Oldsmobile to display in their lobby. They loved it ,put in under lights even.
@@sparkyguitar0058KO CT
BRP.....Before Restrictor Plates
Bill on 7 cylinders an keeping pace with everybody else finishing 4 shows how strong that car truly was
Ernie Elliott motors. His brother is one of the elite engine builders in NASCAR history. Other engineers that come to mind Smokey Yunick, Maurice Petty, the Wood Brothers, Waddell Wilson for Ranier-Lundy, Robert Yates and later his son Doug who still builds the motors for essentially all the Ford teams today, Richie Gilmore for DEI, and the late Randy Dorton for Hendrick. Michael McDowell's Daytona 500-winning car...the engine under the hood of that #34 Ford was crafted by Doug Yates. All of the Toyotas get their engines from TRD (Toyota Racing Development).
@@mattkowal90I think Ernie should be in hall of fame that's a exclusive bunch you named plus Erie won 33 times a cup crewcheif only person I can think of that has that many wins as crewcheif an 41 wins as engine builder is wadelll Wilson. ernie should be in hall of fame
Clevelands are no joke.
@@mattkowal90 I read something somewhere that indicated the Toyota motors were more or less clones of small block Chevrolets. Anything to that or not? Thanks.
Don’t know.
The Elliott car wasn’t about power. The body was physically smaller than was legal; they were able to beat the templates. Earnhardt’s guys would likewise cheat the templates the next year plus by shaving the roofline greenhouse area
I was a senior in High School then. Cale was my favorite driver, I worked at Hardee's for 7 years.
RIP Cale Yarborough 1939-2023🏆🏁
That man was the real deal!
I mean OMG open face helmets - real men and real racing - love watching these old replays more than the current BS they show nowadays
I loved the Alabama gang and Elliott. The 351 Cleveland was untouchable!
Sure it was because the only thing Chevrolet had that would compete as far as cubic inches was a 350 base block. You could only run 357 cubic inches and Ford had a big block and NASCAR didn't have a rule that it had to be a small block.
I've had big blocks and small blocks and I can tell you like this.
From zero to a hundred miles an hour I can take a small block and eat a big block's ass but on top end stretched out as fast as we can run on a two and a half mile track a big block Cleveland could give that small block Chevrolet a two-lap head start and in 80 to 100 laps he would pass him the second time.
No comparison so Bill Elliot in my opinion was never that damn great of a race car driver and that's just my opinion
@@mastercarpenter1970 351-C is a small block. Same 4.38 bore spacing as the SBC.
@@mastercarpenter1970 Except they weren't running the 351C. What they were running was a special engine Ford had made based more on the 351W but incorporated design features of the Cleveland engine. It wasn't a big block. Those went bye bye around '74 or so when then made 358 cu in. the max displacement. You have your opinion about Bill Elliot, I disagree. Nobody ever has had a season like he did in 1985. As good as it was he didn't win the Winston Cup in '85. He had another great year in '87 when he did win it just edging Rusty Wallace in a tremendous battle the last one third of the season.
@@mastercarpenter1970Since when is a 351 cube Ford Cleveland V8 considered to be a big block?
@@bbigjohnson069 Bill was the 1988 champ
I wish they never introduced restrictor plates but downsized the carburetors instead. That would keep the competition and make it safer.
RIP David Pearson 1934-2018
They did reduce the carburetors the second half of 1987. It didn’t work. People should have accepted and embraced the restrictor plates and worked to make the cars far more stuck to the track (also to make the draft unstoppable again like it is today)
The GM boys had an entire year of test&tune with restrictor plates..everyone else had but a couple months to set up their cars for that season..The restrictor plates were implemented specifically to choke power on the Ford Guys running Clevelands...GM guys crying that Fomoco had an unfair advantage
They are actually running downsized carbs in this event, the first one being the firecracker 400 at Daytona a few weeks earlier.....so they did nothing to slow the cars down
@superbird4351 I agree if the 390 4 barrel wasn't enuff of a downsize they could went two a two barrel carb or even a 1 barrel but no let's take a engine making 700 horse power an chock the air off so all the cars could keep up with bill
@@brianbooher7318 had nothing to do with keeping up with Bill, it was about keeping the cars on the ground after Allison flew into the fence and almost into the grandstands.....like le mans in 1955
Man Mike Joy is fantastic isn’t he? He started as the track announcer at riverside speedway in Agawam mass, where I first saw the sights, and smelled the smells of modifieds and late models..in fact, I will take the Whelen tour over the cup cars nowadays.
did not know this miss agawam raced twice there enduro they assigned numbers #80.#47 still use those numbers got to get back i am not done
hes one of my favorites of todays announcing staff.
The great Ken Squire was in the booth...Mike was a pit road reporter during this broadcast. 😊
I rather watch these old races over the new Nascrap of today and besides I did miss some of these old races back then it’s a nice way to revisit and catch up remembering life of a simpler time a time before all this toxic politics of today I am so sick of it
NASCAR in 2024 broke 40 lead changes four times so far (end of July); 1985 never approached that level of competition
It's crazy how wicked the Doppler effect sounds on these cars going over 200 mph. Must've been something to actually be in the stands.
The Doppler effect hasn’t changed; I’m guessing you haven’t been to a race yet. Definitely something you have to experience to understand.
@@Beast_is_a_dumbass220 im just saying the higher speed leads to a higher pitch. Nothing more than than.
man racing was awesome in the 80s . i started in 1991 as an 11 year old who was fasinated about speed .
same age, but i started in about 85 or 86. i clearly remember watching pettys daytona crash live in 88
I remember they used to drag tires from the back of a truck to dry the track. I remember seeing it at Darlington one year.
They use to do that everywhere when it rains that was standard track drying equipment till Bruton an humpy invented the jet dryers which now have been replaced by the air titans but I always thought dragging tires was cool an it also put rubber back in track that had been washed away.
@@brianbooher7318 - They now need to invent a vacuum cleaner for marbles so outside racing lines alive get revived (or at least bettered) during caution periods!
209MPH thru the tri-oval in a notchback Monte Carlo SS or Buick Regal had to be absolutely terrifying to drive. When men were men.
Those cars were so cool, beautiful and very fast. And, they were built better/ tougher and could take a beating better than today's NASCAR cars. I wish it was still like this today. 😟☹️😩
When the drivers had balls of steel, their women loved them for it, and NASCAR didn't regulate EVERY FREAKIN THING! Racing was racing...today's crap is unwatchable...
This looks unwatchable
@@jamesgentry13 How on earth is this unwatchable? The quality is good considering this is from 1985, and the racing is great too.
Watch the Isle of Mann TT racing if you want to see the only real unregulated racing left on the planet. Several people die a year there though and have something like over 200 have died since it started. I still enjoy watching real racing with few rules though. It is motorcycle racing, but it will get your adrenaline rushing just watching it as they scream at near 200MPH on narrow country island roads.
@@johntate4638 It's not racing unless people are dying. smh
Sure Killed alot more drivers back then.
I missed this race on TV. I was 16 and working on Sundays pumping gas at a FULL-SERVICE gas station. Remember those? They went extinct when *good racing* did.
my first job, all the way through highschool, was working at a full service conoco station. filled er up, washed the bugs off the glass and checked the oil if you wanted!
@@ghomerhust Yes, I took pride in my skill with the squeegee, but that didn't stop the occasional, "you missed a spot" customer. Sorry, ma'am, that is a chip, not a bug. Yes, that's a chip also.
My Mama would have driven to where you worked just to get gas. She HATED pumping her own gas! Of course she started driving in 1954 when there was no such thing as a self-service gas station!
Thanks for sharing your racing history with us SMIFF
Same front row as Daytona that year. Go Cale!
Back when men had to wheel those cars going 210 mph!
At 57:00 or so listen carefully as Bobby Allison accelerates out of the pits....you can hear the car in the background as the announcers are talking....it sounds awesome, and I miss that exhaust tone!!
Those 1985 Thunderbirds sure stunk up a lot of Superspeedway shows that season.
First race I ever went to. I'll never forget it!
It was his penultimate career win, he would win his final later that year at the National 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Notice I didn't spoil it! That means it could be anyone, but who? Find out by watching the whole race.
Well, not spoiled totally, but partly. I guessed immediately who it was after seeing your comment.
I always seem to screw up my viewing experience by scrolling down to see the comments. Should have already learned not to after so many times.
Well I saw it live so no spoiler for me.
Didn't spoil it for me. I was there. I remember this was Davey Allison's first race.
@@backporchdriver3763 Finished 10th, then finished 7th the next year substituting for his good buddy Neil Bonnett in the 12. Somehow he avoided his Father's accident in T1 on the final lap.
The comments on this is more passionate than anything nascar related today
Bill Elliott looks like his name should be Bill
These superspeedway races for a few years all had the same sponsor and name, the we're all the elliot 500. Nobody in same league, there has never been and never will be a car that dominant again.
Had nascsr not changed so many rules to let gm catch up elliots would won alot more.nascar did everything that they could to catch gm up even let them stick that bubble they call the areo coupe which is nuthing more than a areo dynamics band aid nascar gave gm jus to keep up with the elliots.
@@brianbooher7318 Childress and Earnhardt were nascar's biggest crybabies at the time
@@mrnascar9129 absolutely had Nascar made the manufacturer run what they built an not restricted them it would been 1990 atleasy before anyone would have touched the Elliott even if they jus run what they were running here in 85 but the gace the gm cars them aero dynamic band aid cars in 86 .
Couldnt believe what I was watching that day. I dont think we will see it again. Thats why they got the plate.
I'd rather watch these old races than what their calling nascar racing now. These dudes were balls to the walls....no restrictor plates...just cool heads and heavy feet...and you gotta love how badass these stock cars look...sitting low and mean..
It was woefully inferior to today. Racing is 50-plus lead changes and slam draft combat all 188 laps; this 1985 race is inferior in every way
It's who's left after all the stupidten car pile-ups nd the 'big one' everybody's waiting for, usually some back marker who gets lucky,there's your winner, not for me.
@@STP43FAN1 Thats not racing. Its contrived racing nowadays. Its embarrassing.
Big upload! Really good segment with Economaki and the manufacturers too
Journey playing during the intro??? These were some awesome times.....
Very cool , love those old races 👍
We got a fouled plug. But Bill is still running 4th... Man them were the days!
Unbelievable!!
Shows how dam strong that car was I heard Greg sack bragin about beating bill in firecracker 85 which he did but they forget to mention bill had to pit with a couple laps To go an Greg stretched his fuel so its not like he out run bill..bill made up over 5 miles at Winston 5pp an his twin 125 at Daytona in 85 he laped entire field except 2nd place waltrip an he was almost 40 seconds behind an would been laped in another 2 laps thats getting it done in a 125
That car was illegally small. It wasn’t a fundamentally better car
@@brianbooher7318bill also had a severe vibration because of a bent drive shaft. If not for that and a pit stop near the end, the world would have never heard of Greg Sacks
@@STP43FAN1It was more aerodynamic. Elliot was good, not great. Without the aero advantage of the Thunderchicken, he was average.
Buddy Arrington is such a badass!
Another gem smiff
The greatest era of NASCAR! BP - Before Plates
Good upload SMIFF, outstanding once again...
An estimated 35k was on hand for the 2019 California race. Was more like 25k to 28k. Please Nascar stop the Chase silliness so we can have a true season champ. Bring back a race at the Rock or N wilkesboro. Drop Cali or Indy. Sorry guys but I have to watch old races to get my fix now and it's not right.
Same
Agree.
i say Cali should go. that race is always boring. racing at the Brickyard is alright tho.
Josh Hust made a good point and were gettin somethin now
The Rock was dull the last eight years it ran. North Wilkesboro is the LEAST competitive track in NASCAR history - just seven lead changes per race (the road courses used to average nine; it’s ticked upward to 11-12 lead changes per race the last few years). We need to stop kidding ourselves and admit a lot of changes have been good (certainly not all like radial tires, the raindrop body style without coke bottle and long snout wedge body styles as competition, lack of downforce and stupid warring against downforce, shifting on ovals, no real points value given to wins and most laps led)
Thank you for posting
The Elliott clan. Big horsepower and even better aerodynamics. Only thing slicker than their T-birds of this era were Chrysler "Wing Cars" from 69-70.
So many names you don't hear anymore.
I was a #3 fan but nobody could stay with Elliot’s unrestricted Clevor engine & narrow car.
Clever is correct. They did what every racer in history has tried to do, they found a loophole in the rules and brilliantly engineered an engine that, within the rules, could not be beaten. Especially with that slippery Ford Thunderbird body to complete the idea.
Bill's T-Bird was the same size as every other T-Bird in the field, and fit all the template measurements of that time. The "downsized car" story is nothing but a farcical urban legend....
Cleveland Engine with clever Ernie Elliott engineering!
And Bill's car fit the templates, so you GM fans can cry all you want but he whupped yer asses in 1985 big time!
@@knobdikker not only whipped their asses he sent them home crying to their mommies he was unbelievable that year they talk about him making up 5 miles under green I think him lapping the entire field expt 2 place waltripin his twin 125 an he'd laped him in 2 more laps in his he won by 40 seconds in his twin 125
Bob Glidden had done worked some magic on Bill Elliot heads in the 85.
Ford kicking everybodys ass before Restrictor plate racing ruined Nascar.
The restrictors weren’t there when Ford won just five times in 1986
And far from ruining anything the restrictors helped improve the raceability of the cars (and as the 2024 Pennzoil 250 showed they still do)
They probably put chevy engines in them. LOL
@@STP43FAN1 No it didn't. Restrictor plate and 'superspeedway' rules are a joke nowadays
Oh yes it did. There was no competition in 1985 and this is dreadful and worthless as any kind if competition accomplishment. Make the draft universally effective.
In 85 the only guy who could really run with the 9 was Cale. And that was only occasionally. When the 9 was on...it was untouchable. Wadell Wilson knew how to screw together a Windsor about as good as Ernie knew how to put together a Cleavor. And the GM boys needed rule changes or they were just running for fastest in-brand.
Yes Cale was about the only real competition in those days! If bill was on there was nothing they could do with him! They just had that motor and body chiseled to perfection!! Not to mention a fantastic driver behind the wheel! If their short track program had been even remotely close they would have won at least three or four championships!!
Hell nascar let them alter their whole back half of their car .gm called it the areo coupe but in all reality it waz jus an areo dynamics band aid nascar gave gm jus to keep up with the elliots
@@brianbooher7318 Yup....and that first year of SS Aero Coupe production was only 200 cars if my memory serves me correctly.
@@toddjohnson7133 yea jus enuff to let them alter the 86 race car with that areo dynamic band aid back window simply to keep bill from lapping the field on the big tracks.
Cleveland engine, not "Clevor."
A 1985 Nascar is faster then a 2018 Nascar. How's about them apples.
dale bowman Only because of restrictor plates. Today’s cars have clocked in at 235 mph without the restrictor plates.
Actually they clock Knight Rider Super Pursuit Mode speed of 280 mph.
Bengt Handlebars I know they don’t. That’s why I’m mentioning it in the first place dumbass.
@@superbird4351 Please tell me where they were allowed to run laps without restrictor plates where they got up to 235mph with some proof.
@@dartmaster501 I know Rusty Wallace did tests in the mid 90s and got up there.
Man I miss this. Back when MEN drove the cars
R.I.P. Cale, Dale, Neil, J.D. and Davey. Nobody could imagine his unbelievable career would begin and, way too soon, end at Talladega.
Racing was Much Better In those days. This is what I grew up on. I was 15 when this race happened, and I loved it back then; pack racing is boring..
Still a bit of dampness on the track when the green finally fell. Today's drivers would poop their pants at the thought.
"We can't race. My Daddy spent a lot of his trucking/construction company money to buy me this ride!"
Davey Allison's first Grand National stock car race...
Yep,driving for famous Hoss Ellington's #1 from here in Wilmington NC.
Finished 10th in his debut, then 7th the next year substituting for Neil Bonnett after he was injured in a crash at Pocono the week prior in the Junior Johnson #12. A year and half after this he won his first Cup race, and followed it up with wins there in 1989 and 1992.
@@mattkowal90 19 Wins R.I.P.
@@coca-colatrackhousewarrior9925 19 wins in 191 starts too, so just under a 10% winning average. Probably 9.999%. Includes 3 Winston 500's, 1992 Daytona 500, 1989 Pepsi 400, unfortunately didn't the Talladega 500, and quite a few road course wins.
Tim Richmond was still alive back then...
I would really love to have seen what Ernie's motor was REALLY putting out.....
Ned Jarrett had several shows where he stated that most of the top contenders were around 875hp. But Ernie Elliott's engine package was cooling the heads down and was reaching 13.9:1 compression because of being slightly cooler. The best of the rest was only getting 13:1 barely. He guessed by math that Bill was sitting on 925hp or so.
Many will say BS to the 875hp, but just remember a Hellcat @707hp wouldn't really hit but about 186 mph. These cars are lighter, but way less aerodynamic than a Hellcat. They were talking about Ernie had a cam and heads that no one else had. Well His Dad had bought a Penske Racing dyno back in 79-80 and started work on the 351 cleveland. I am sure his Dad had a cam grinder as well, if he had the money for a dyno. As far as showing actual horsepower, I am not so sure it would tell you that. Most likely it was more of just a tuning dyno that added brake and you worked the engine to get the best mixture at certain RPM. Really a high dollar carb tuner...
To this day though, I've never seen anything of Ernie saying anything about the dyno, but they way the entire Southeast was after his ass, I doubt he wanted to reveal anything while it counted...
@kramnull8962 ernie also had the first cnc machine in nascar an made his own heads out of bullet aluminum blocks an machined them hisself.
Bill Elliott won 11 races this season and didn't win the championship. One of the great mysteries of NASCAR.
Very good question. The answer is how did he finish in the rest of the schedule?? I wish the point system was still the same as it was in the 70s and 80s and until the playoff deal started. Playoffs are for Baseball. And they ain't but 1 Baseball team......THE NEW YORK YANKEES,,,,Period.
Or the Boston Red Sox in the 2000s and 2010s.
Bill Elliott either won or crashed. He broke his leg 3rd race of the season. Crashed at Richmond, lost his breaks at martinsville and Charlotte. Had mechanical failures at dover, wilkesboro and riverside. Ole DW was in the top 10 every single race.
@@jarflymystique6545 yes if bill had a good short track program they would have won 3 or 4 championships! They were very inconsistent on short tracks period! Plus waltrip was a master at closing races out with good finishes! It’s really sad he didn’t win the championship that year!!
nice info about the race cars pretty neat durring rain delay
1:03:18
Thrilling onboard from Geoff Bodine. That's what well over 200mph looks like from the driver standpoint
Great job Cale
2:16:15 Childress 😭😭😭😭😭😭 about the horsepower and aerodynamics of the Thunderbird!
Before NASCAR turned into the WWF
that's actually a really astute comparison
*WWE
I feel looking back at these races that we was really lucky to see a race like this cause they ain't any now and these are all American Cars
R I P Connie Saylor
He's alright he's just got glass in his face
Earnhardt right?
Earnhardt i couldn't stand but he was right if that drives driveshaft had came thru his window it woulda cut his head off
I not only miss this type of racing, but I really miss this type of commentating. These guys know when to talk and when to shut up. And you don't have that annoying nasal twang of Jeff Burton.
You see why Junior hired Elliott away in '92 when he became available!
It's a shame junior destroyed that 92 team an fired Tim brewer cause he got suppenaed by flossie in her an juniors divorce an he destroyed what was set to be a dynasty an certainly would won attest 1 cup but junior destroyed it all
2:22:28 ..."Mexican speed wrench"...LOL... Can't say that anymore!
I’m all for safety but they ruined the stock car part of nascar with the new safety rules. Wish they could keep the safety and bring back good old stock car racing
eric burhed stock car racing is basically Indy car at this point. Wish nascar had a competitor.
American pussies 😂🖕
Ruined? How? Specifics please because I never get credible specifics when I press people what they won’t embrace in modern NASCAR
@@STP43FAN1 you went ,25 mph through pit road pass thru penalty, basically taking that car chances of winning going two laps down, they go too far about crap like that, oh no there's agum wrapper on the track .
I'm a lifelong Bobby and Davey Allison fan so is my Dad and brother, we were actually at this race when I was 2 years old
Have a Classic NASCAR series. No body newer then 1980. All safety features just with an older body. Cuts through the air like a brick.
he is so funny with his umbrella Goeff, i liked when Goeff Bodine was ran levy garrett like sponsor i loved this paint scheme personally
Real racing before it was made "safe and equal"
Back when racing was actually still racing.... back when drivers drove the cars unlike today where the cars drive the drivers around the track. Certainly after Allison's catch fence accident in '87, the world of NASCAR started becoming a joke, with the biggest problem being with restrictor plates. And then the drivers started becoming a joke in the 2000's with Kyle Busch and Bubba Wallace topping the list of drivers who care more about their egos than their driving. Those aren't real men... people like Bobby Allison, A.J. Foyt, Richard Petty and Dale Sr. were real men.... enough said
1:58:20 Ken Squire said Bonnett claims they are closing on Bill Elliott. 1:58:42. Bill says, "Hold my Coors!"
back in those day's were the REAL FREIGHT TRAINS !!!👍
I have many Daytona and Talladega on VHS; condition unknown.
Roughly 1989 to 2000. Most should be full races; some with all commercials and some without.
Would you be interested in them?
All I would ask is a DVD copy for my personal collection.
I know I have but not limited to the races: Earnhardt/Elliott tri-oval crash(es). The Swerving Irvin era, The HUGE wreck at the Firecracker 400 with Petty,
many full Twin 125s, Waltrip's 400 crash, Martin's caution free win, etc.
Do you have a phone number would like to buy some from you if possible
704-232-7886
This is a copyright infringement. I am with the FBI. You will be receiving a visit from a field unit. We have tracked your location...
@@Poohdaddymagic
Your field agent just left my location.
Wow, she was HOT.
I'm gonna be infringing again, and soon!
We will never see racing like this again, it's currently really F#$ked up
Bill would have won this race had he not had a fouled spark plug.
And for you Chevy whiners, two major rule changes thrown at Bill since Daytona--0.5" increased height of car, and 1/4" restrictor plate that cut the carb bore from 1-11/16" to 1-7/16"
This amazing entertainment. Announcers driver and cars awesome.
Absolutely Real Racing
All so much better then than now. Restrictor Plates really started the downfall of Nascar. They were invented to make the racing safer, yet there's much more crashes now than there ever was on super speedways. With all the other safety innovations since then, I say it's passed time to take the restrictor plates off!
No the incidence of crashes wasn’t lower before the restrictor plates
Earnhardt With glass in his face and ice water in this veins after a piece of drive shaft comes through his windshield. One tough customer indeed
Ahh yes, 1985. The year awesome Bill ruled the stock car world. Good times.
onboard footage is incredible,seriously fast
I wish I could have been there.
i laugh when i hear todays drivers complain about safety or it’s hot in the car 😂😂😂 put em in one of these if you wanna make a driver outa them 😁 god i miss these days! best years of my life!
1:02:32 race start.
Broadcasting is the best back in the day. I feel bad for Joy w/ dem gagoffs nowadays. Listen to new races on the radio. RIP B.H.
You guys ever watch the races from the 60s? The rear bumper of the cars take a slightly higher line through the corners than the front bumper
1985 made Nascar realize that excellence could not be tolerated, they decided to punish excellence in order to make all equal. Way to go Nascar, you've made us all progressives now! Bet you are searching for a Trans sexie driver aren't you? You do need a different kind of fan now right?
Its driving the GM camp mad why Fords so fast and its in plain sight and the couldn't see it. Elliott was accused of everything in the book. That made for some interesting conversations. Some got heated.
how do you find this great footage
most of these come from old VHS recordings of the originally aired races, ripped onto the computer to upload. that's why you have little glitches, like VCR tracking and such.
Love the huge cheer when the pace car hit pit road. @1:02:19