Agreed. If someone wanted to make a REAL racing movie, look no further then this man.He looks good. The guy has lived quite a life.
Crashing that hard can kill you. So can losing both of your sons.
Couldnt have said it any better, Bobby Allison, too me...... is the greatest ever. He could build it from the ground up then drive the hell out of it.You guys are spot on. For my money, a case can be made that Robert Arthur Allison is the best stock car driver ever. I know he doesn't have the titles to make that claim. And I know Petty and Pearson won more in that era. So, I'm not trying to start an argument. Petty won the bulk of his races at Petty Enterprises. Pearson with Holman Moody and the Wood Brothers. I'm not taking anything away from those two guys. Both are solid legends in their own right. Bobby was known to be a little tough to deal with in his day. That's a contributing factor to him never really having a long time ride. I've always been impressed with the success he had in spite of ride hopping as much as he did. And he won the Daytona 500 at fifty years of age. Junior Johnson of all people paid Bobby the greatest compliment. He said a few years ago, if he would have kept Bobby, instead of hiring Cale, they (Junior and Bobby) would have won more races that the Pettys. We'll never know. Junior and Bobby parted ways at the end of the 1972 season I believe. Cale joined Junior at the same time. Junior/Cale won the title in '76,'77 and '78. What might have been if Bobby and Junior could have got along? Bobbys' autobiography is a good read. His highs have really been high. His lows would have been nearly unbearable for most men. He is a legend, no doubt.
When I was a kid, it was the biggest deal in the world when Bobby, Donnie and Red Farmer showed up at the local bullring. An eight year old getting to sit in the seat of a 57 Chevy stock car that Bobby Allison had just drove in a 100 lap feature was almost better than Santa coming. You could still feel the heat and smell the tires. Now that may sound a little goofy, but it was a big deal. Bobby was always my favorite.
He rode me around the track after he went through Tech at Myrtle Beach Speedway, that was the day before the 1975 Southern 500 at Darlington when he won in a Matador. Little did I know that was the beginning of my racing career.When I was a kid, it was the biggest deal in the world when Bobby, Donnie and Red Farmer showed up at the local bullring. An eight year old getting to sit in the seat of a 57 Chevy stock car that Bobby Allison had just drove in a 100 lap feature was almost better than Santa coming. You could still feel the heat and smell the tires. Now that may sound a little goofy, but it was a big deal. Bobby was always my favorite.
He rode me around the track after he went through Tech at Myrtle Beach Speedway, that was the day before the 1975 Southern 500 at Darlington when he won in a Matador. Little did I know that was the beginning of my racing career.
You arent a dummy, you were a Petty fan and probably fiercely loyal one and those two went at it tooth and nail. As I look back now as an Allison fan, I appreciate all of the drivers he raced against. Even Darrell, but that took some therapy.I an really enjoying reading everyones great memories.
I was a Petty fan and and I am still am, and back in the day in my small world Bobby Allison was the enemy.
I remember a couple of 200 lappers he ran at Greenville Pickens. He did a fly over one time on his way to the track. Another time he had something to break on the car and they welded it back together. He came back on the track about 50 laps down. He battled
with the leader Butch Lindley just like it was for the lead. They ran door to door and swapped track positions several times. I guess he knew thats what the people came for, it was great stuff.
I was a big dummy for not appreciating his greatness in real time. I started to post it another thread a few days ago, this one just seemed more appropriate to me.
https://racing-forums.com/threads/nascar-stuff-you-were-really-wrong-about.61418/#post-1286145
Damn Aunty! I didnt know they had wide fives back then!
During the 1980s, he designed an aircraft propeller-loaded-dyno for Winston Cup and Busch engines.
James Hylton has one of those too. I don't know if they are of the same design or not. Bobby was never one of the guys I really pulled for, but you HAVE to respect his driving ability, his car building skills, his tenacity, and the fact that he has gone through so many awful things and is still standing. 99% of the races today aren't worthy enough to carry his helmet bag.
lol. The Alabama gang and their tricked up rides.Those 3 were at the cutting edge of technology.
Runnin’ around beating up on the low budget teams.
Sorry for going off topic...but did Junior Johnson get along with anyone?
Agreed. If someone wanted to make a REAL racing movie, look no further then this man.