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Fred Lorenzen was the first to win $100,000 in a single season.

Where is ... Fred Lorenzen?

By Rick Houston, Special to NASCAR.COM
July 19, 2007
12:05 PM EDT
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Fred Lorenzen is a busy man, even today, at the age of 72.

Call back in an hour, he tells a reporter who dialed his Chicago-area number. He's got a lot on his plate today.

An hour or so later, he's still busy. Would tomorrow morning be any better, the caller asks. Nope. Lorenzen, one of NASCAR's first superstars in the 1960s, is going to be tied up then as well. He can take a few minutes to chat, but that's it.

lorenzen.193.jpg
Fred Lorenzen

These days, Lorenzen says he's no longer involved in real estate. Instead, he's heavily into the stock market and lives off the dividends of his portfolio. His offering of choice? A simple answer.

"ExxonMobil ... that's the biggest stock in the world," Lorenzen said matter-of-factly. "That's the only stock to really invest in. It just keeps going up, up, up, up."

As of around 9:30 a.m. on July 19, a share of ExxonMobil was going for more than 91 bucks, up more than a dollar from just two days before. Lorenzen, evidently, knows of which he speaks. Son Christopher, 31, is a day trader.

"He makes big money, more than I ever made," Lorenzen said, adding, "He makes in a year more than I ever made in my whole life."

Another child, daughter Amanda, 29, is a recently married first-grade school teacher at a private school in Chicago.

Lorenzen could almost always drive. At 13, he cobbled together a car that had as its power source an old washing machine motor. As a high school student, he won a demolition derby. His career in motorsports was off and running.

He ran modifieds in the Midwest and then USAC stock cars. He turned his attention to NASCAR's Grand National (now Nextel Cup) circuit in 1960. Although not once did he run a full schedule, or really anything close to it, he became a legend, the "Golden Boy" of NASCAR's golden era.

At the height of Lorenzen's success, Richard Petty won the 1964 -- his first -- and 1967 championships. With the backing of Ford and the famed Holman & Moody race team, Lorenzen could've mounted a serious challenge for those titles if he'd chosen to do so.

If Lorenzen had made a concentrated run for the championship, would Richard Petty have seven to his credit? Lorenzen says he doesn't know what might have happened. He just doesn't know.

Still, it's an interesting thought, an alternative history that will never be.

"I didn't really want to [run a full schedule]," Lorenzen said. "It's too much traveling. I get tired of traveling. You're gone all the time. These guys that are doing it right now, I don't see how they do it. You're never home."

In a seven-year span between 1961 and 1967, Lorenzen won a total of 26 races in just 112 starts. In 1963, despite running just 29 of the year's 55 races, Lorenzen became the first driver to amass more than $100,000 in winnings in a single season. Two years later, early in 1965, Lorenzen won a rain-shortened Daytona 500.

What made Lorenzen so good?

"It's just something I wanted to do," he said. "When you decide you want to do something, you put your mind to it and you can do it. You've gotta really want it, though. I gave up everything to go racing. I didn't party, nothing." (Continued)

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