San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

FINAL LAP REMINDS OF HISTORY

- BY STEVE HENSON Henson writes for the Los Angeles Times.

Long before Jimmie Johnson and Kyle Busch notched their first NASCAR Cup Series victories at legendary Auto Club Speedway, Fontana was home to a quarter-mile strip that became a major stop for the National Hot Rod Assn. while also attracting on a nightly basis all manner of amateur racers.

Oh, and a monster. Not a monster truck or an energy drink, but an alleged beast described by a local newspaper as “a horrible monster with a hairy body, long hands, and claws dripping with slime.”

Two teenage girls reported to the San Bernardino County sheriff ’s office in August 1966 that while parked on Base Line Road near the racetrack, the creature emerged from behind a bush and scratched the neck of Jerri Lou Mendenhall, 16, before she made like drag racer Bill “Grumpy” Jenkins, hit the accelerato­r and sped away.

Sheriff’s deputy O.W. Manning said, “I think this monster business is a lot of hooey,” but hysteria ensued anyway, with teens descending on the area with .22 rif les. The monster apparently eluded them because for years spectators at the popular dragstrip reported sightings in the brush beyond the track.

The creature, rather inelegantl­y named “The Invincible Brush Man” by the Ontario Daily Report, seemed oddly drawn to noisy racetracks. So when the nearby Auto Club Speedway begins its long-awaited and extensive remodeling after today’s Pala Casino 400, perhaps workers can be on the lookout for its remains. Or at least an enormous threetoed footprint.

The plan is to reduce the track from two miles to a half-mile and modernize the speedway so that races appeal to a broad demographi­c, not just hardcore NASCAR fans. Details are scarce so far, but the remodeled speedway should fit neatly into NASCAR’S current strategy of making attending a race more than simply attending a race.

“I think we’ve been at a point where entertainm­ent is our business,” Auto Club Speedway President Dave Allen said. “What the drivers do on the track is how memories are generated and what people are thinking about when they leave. But it’s the integratio­n of everything. It’s important for us to stay diversifie­d and provide entertainm­ent for people to have fun all day long.”

Last month’s Clash at the Coliseum and this summer’s Chicago Street Race provide the template. Expect the new Auto Club Speedway — which may take up to two years to rebuild — to have improved dining options and more comfortabl­e seating. It will serve as a concert venue and host a variety of other events.

Cautionary tales

Predecesso­rs can offer more than nostalgia. Not far from the Auto Club Speedway were two initially popular racetracks whose demise remind NASCAR to keep Fontana relevant to a young, technologi­cally savvy audience.

NASCAR confirmed Friday that it has closed a deal to sell a large part of the Auto Club Speedway land to its business partner Hillwood, a Dallas-based company that is helping NASCAR sell parts of its extensive properties nationwide. NASCAR will retain 89 acres to continue with plans to develop the half-mile track.

The sale has long been part of the strategy to downsize the current configurat­ion, according to a NASCAR official who requested anonymity because he’s not authorized to talk about the topic on the record. Proceeds from the sale could be reinvested into the new track.

For race fans, that plan is infinitely preferable to what became of once-robust raceways in Riverside and Ontario.

For 32 years, Riverside Internatio­nal Raceway was considered a cutting-edge venue because of its ability to stage Indianapol­is 500-style racing, NASCAR’S Winston Western 500, dragsters and motorcycle­s on three track configurat­ions of different lengths.

Movies such as “The Love Bug” and TV shows including “The Rockford Files” and “CHIPS” were shot there.

No matter. Attendance dwindled, the suburb of Moreno Valley grew around it and new neighbors complained about the noise. The land became too valuable for the raceway’s owners to resist selling in 1989, and now a mall sits where cars roared.

For a seeming eye blink, three miles from the Auto Club Speedway lived another track that opened to great expectatio­ns. The Ontario Motor Speedway, billed as the “Indianapol­is of the West,” was demolished 10 years after it was built in 1970.

Not that it lacked certain charms. It was the first venue to provide corporate suites and offer membership­s to a private stadium club. Paul Newman and Kirk Douglas sat on the board of directors. The track’s first race was a celebrity pro-am featuring entertainm­ent industry hotshots paired with profession­al drivers, and it aired as a TV special.

The 2.5-mile track was built as a replica of the Indianapol­is Motor Speedway, complete with a rectangula­r oval configurat­ion and low banking in the turns. Garage facilities were first-rate. Retaining walls were considered the safest ever built. And a computeriz­ed timing and scoring system was so popular it was adopted by the Formula One circuit.

The venue was utilized for more than racing. Evel Knievel’s record jump over 19 cars drew 50,000 a day before the Miller High Life 500 in 1971. Two enormous rock festivals, California Jam in 1974 and California Jam II in 1978, each drew crowds of 300,000.

Yet not even a shoot location for an episode of “Charlie’s Angels” could save it. The Chevron Land Company acquired the speedway and in 1980 foreclosed on the property, which these days is home to the Toyota Arena (where the AHL’S Ontario Reign play), a Hilton, business offices and condos.

Memories

Seventeen years after the Ontario Motor Speedway vanished, Roger Penske spent $110 million to mimic his D-shaped oval at Michigan Speedway, the only other two-mile track on the NASCAR circuit. The venue was called the California Speedway until 2008 when Auto Club purchased naming rights.

Land for the speedway was purchased from the Kaiser Steel Mill, which went out of business after its World War II heyday of producing steel for airplane and shipbuildi­ng plants.

Jeff Gordon won the first NASCAR race at the speedway, the California 500, by a few drops of gas. He didn’t run out until his victory lap while Mark Martin’s tank emptied on the last lap and he watched helplessly as Gordon and seven other drivers passed him.

Only two drivers have posted their first NASCAR Cup Series victories at the California Speedway, and both are legends: Jimmie Johnson won in 2002 at age 26 and Kyle Busch in 2005 at 20.

Johnson had family and friends in the stands. He visited his hometown ahead of the race and partied afterward with Gordon, who as co-owner of Hendrick Motorsport­s had elevated Johnson from the Xfinity Series.

“We stopped through San Diego, saw some people and hit my favorite taco stand before I went up to the race,” Johnson said in 2011. “And having that pressure of your first win, your home track and not throw it away was all riding on my shoulders.”

Gordon suggested they celebrate by filling the motor home he’d rented with friends and heading up I-10 to L.A. for nightlife.

“We were definitely out of place, but we had a big time,” said Johnson, who has won the Auto Club 400 a record six times.

Busch has won the Auto Club 400 four times, most recently in 2019 when he notched his 200th NASCAR victory.

The fastest time on the track is a world closedcour­se record set by Indycar driver Gil de Ferran in 2000 with a qualifying lap of 241.428 mph. A year earlier, Indycar great Greg Moore lost his life in an accident on the 10th lap of the Marlboro 500 at California Speedway.

Saying goodbye

Drivers seem in lockstep when it comes to their opinions about NASCAR’S decision to shorten the Auto Club Speedway track: They understand the appeal of short-track racing to fans and agree with the strategy to combine racing with other entertainm­ent.

However, they are sad that they will run their last race on the two-mile track today. Why? The track itself is so much fun.

“There are a lot of different lane options, so we aren’t all committed to the same lane,” said Kyle Larson, who won the Auto Club 400 last year and in 2017. “It’s an old worn-out surface. It makes things a handful in the cockpit, but it’s a lot of fun.”

 ?? ALEX GALLARDO 2017 AP FILE ?? Kyle Larson (front left) takes lead from pole position at start of the NASCAR race at Auto Club Speedway.
ALEX GALLARDO 2017 AP FILE Kyle Larson (front left) takes lead from pole position at start of the NASCAR race at Auto Club Speedway.

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