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Juan Montoya won in his first Nextel Cup road race.

Riverside set precedent for road specialists of today

Drivers like Montoya help fuel NASCAR's competitiveness

By Tom McCarthy, NASCAR.COM
June 26, 2007
09:27 AM EDT
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Of all the outlandish, harebrained schemes to put your race team back on the map, this one takes the cake.

Imagine a NASCAR team owner, with a proud record of success, looking to make a splash once again for the team and its sponsors. But instead of picking from the deep field of young and hungry local talent to develop into a champion, the team looks overseas for a proven commodity who can make an immediate impact here in the States.

The plan? Lure a Formula One winner to America and dominate the road-course races. But not wanting to appear too obvious, the team starts its ace on an oval. His first big race? The Daytona 500. His first big NASCAR win? The only California road course on the NASCAR schedule. The year? 1963.

Wait, what?

The team was Holman-Moody. The driver was Dan Gurney. And the track was Riverside International Raceway.

Whether it's Riverside in 1963, or Infineon Raceway in 2007, California road courses have a knack for playing key roles in increasing the depth of NASCAR's talent pool.

NASCAR's first two races at Riverside were held in 1958 and 1961. But it wasn't until the track was awarded a regular spot on the schedule in 1963 that it began to make a direct impact on the sport, the reverberations of which are still being felt today.

Gurney's win signaled the dawn of the road-course specialist era. Though some question the value of ringers today, at the time, such a concept was no big deal. Teams routinely ran abbreviated NASCAR schedules and would cherry pick drivers as the situation dictated. At the time, though, few dared to dream as big as John Holman and Ralph Moody (often) did.

History would show that Gurney's win was no fluke. He went on to win Riverside four more times between 1964 and 1968 driving for the Wood Brothers. Every time he won that race, he won big -- leading the most laps by a crushing margin.

Keep in mind that these races at Riverside were not the sprints that road-course races are today. They were 500 miles long and took about six hours to complete. The cars had no power steering. The drivers had no cool suits. Talk about earning a paycheck. (Continued)

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Riverside International Raceway

Track Winners
Year Driver Driver
1958 Eddie Gray N/A
1961 Lloyd Dane N/A
1963 Dan Gurney Darel Dieringer
1964 Dan Gurney N/A
1965 Dan Gurney N/A
1966 Dan Gurney N/A
1967 Parnelli Jones N/A
1968 Dan Gurney N/A
1969 Richard Petty N/A
1970 A.J. Foyt Richard Petty
1971 Ray Elder Bobby Allison
1972 Richard Petty Ray Elder
1973 Mark Donohue Bobby Allison
1974 Cale Yarborough Cale Yarborough
1975 Bobby Allison Richard Petty
1976 David Pearson David Pearson
1977 David Pearson Richard Petty
1978 Cale Yarborough Benny Parsons
1979 Darrell Waltrip Bobby Allison
1980 Darrell Waltrip Darrell Waltrip
1981 Bobby Allison Darrell Waltrip
1982 Tim Richmond Tim Richmond
1983 Ricky Rudd Bill Elliott
1984 Terry Labonte Geoffrey Bodine
1985 Terry Labonte Ricky Rudd
1986 Darrell Waltrip Tim Richmond
1987 Tim Richmond Rusty Wallace
1988 Rusty Wallace N/A

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