1964 Firecracker 400 Explained

The 1964 Firecracker 400 was a NASCAR Grand National Series event that was held on July 4, 1964, at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida. It was the first NASCAR Grand National Series race to take place after Fireball Roberts died two months earlier in the infamous 1964 World 600. This race would eventually be aired on ABC's Wide World of Sports on tape-delay.

Race report

There were 33 American-born drivers on the official grid.[1] Fred Lorenzen (employed by Holman Moody) secured his last-place finish during the parade laps because he refused to start the race.[1] Paul Goldsmith also elected not to start the race; making Doug Moore the "legitimate" last-place finisher due to a distributor issue on lap 1. Reb Wickersham spun on the first lap and very nearly took out Foyt.[1] It took just more than two and a half hours for A. J. Foyt to defeat Bobby Isaac by a single car length in front of more than 30000 spectators.[1] There were 19 lead changes and five caution periods for 25 laps.[1]

Rodney Williams would make his NASCAR debut in this race.[2] A.J. Foyt would appear in various races from the 1960s through the 1990s. His most notable future wins would come at the 1972 Daytona 500 and the 1972 Miller High Life 500.[3] Larry Frank would carry two movie cameras in his car to record all the action being taken place. Attempts to record NASCAR history had already been attempted for the 1955 Southern 500 and the 1956 Southern 500.[4]

For the final 56 laps, Isaac and Foyt dueled for the win, exchanging the lead 15 times between the two.[1] Despite a blown engine African-American racer Wendell Scott brought his self-owned Ford home with a top-20.[1] This race was run two days after President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 into law.

Ken Spikes didn't return to racing until the 1967 Daytona 500.[5] He was also hurt in the lap 88 wreck; going sideways on the outside of turn 4, slammed the inside wall broadside thankfully on the rightside of the car.[1] [2] He would probably have been killed if it had hit on the other side.[1] [2]

Top 10 finishers

PosGridDriverManufacturerWinningsTime/Status
119 47 Dodge 160 $13,000 14 2:38:28
24 26 Dodge 160 $8,895 43 +1 car length
39 54 Plymouth 160 $5,430 0 Lead lap under green flag
45 3 Dodge 158 $3,475 0 +2 laps
52 41 Plymouth 158 $2,200 0 +2 laps
67 6 Dodge 158 $1,900 0 +2 laps
721 0 156 $1,350 0 +4 laps
88 5 Dodge 156 $1,450 1 +4 laps
91 16 Mercury 153 $1,250 0 +7 laps
1013 82 Pontiac 152 $1,050 0 +8 laps

Timeline

Section reference: [1]

Notes and References

  1. http://www.racing-reference.info/race/1964-35/W 1964 Firecracker 400
  2. http://www.race-database.com/results/results.php?year=1964&race=35&series_id=2 1964 Firecracker 400
  3. https://sports.yahoo.com/nascar/news?slug=ycn-9006185 A.J. Foyt’s top five career accomplishments
  4. Stock Cars of 50s & 60s – Stock Car Memories: Darlington-Southern 500 . DVD . Topics Entertainment .
  5. https://www.racing-reference.info/driver/Ken_Spikes Driver Ken Spikes Career Statistics