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BackYoungest of racing family made name as relief driver (cont'd)

"When I got in it, Bobby and Cale were ahead, and I was amazed, because the car was faster than anybody on the race track," Utsman said. "Then Bobby and Cale got together and wrecked later on. And [Richard] Petty had problems. Back then, the competition wasn't as strong as it is today. But Benny's car was really fast that day. We ended up with the record at the time, for winning by seven laps."

Even though he didn't get credit for winning the race, Utsman still is proud of his accomplishments that day.

My biggest thrill in NASCAR, by far, was getting in Benny's car at Bristol ...

-- JOHN UTSMAN

1973 Volunteer 500

Results
Pos. Driver Make Behind*
1. Benny Parsons Chevy --
2. L.D. Ottinger Chevy -7
3. Cecil Gordon Chevy -8
4. Lennie Pond Chevy -15
5. J.D. McDuffie Chevy -27
* Laps

"The car was fast, that's what tickled me," Utsman said. "I could outrun Cale, and I knew Cale led all 500 laps that first race, so if you could beat him, you were doing something."

But the Utsman family racing history goes back well before Bristol was built.

"My dad had an old race car before I was ever born," Utsman said. "In 1946 or 1947, that's the first I remember going to a race. They had an old track in Bluff City that was called Island Park -- there was an island over there where the river comes down -- and they used to pour oil on the track to kill the dust, rather than water. They used to all run '34 Fords and '32 Fords and stuff like that, with flatheads in them. And they used to run regular tires, they didn't have special tires for them. They slipped and slid like they do today because they didn't have tires for it."

"When my uncle [Dub] got out of the service, he drove my dad's car. Then my older brother Sherman started in '51, and then Layman [a second brother] got out of the service in '55 and he started driving. Then I started in '60. The first race my mother ever seen us all run was in 1968 at Sportsman Speedway in Johnson City [Tenn.]. I won the race that night and they ran second and third. We used to do that quite a bit, run 1-2-3."

In fact, three Utsmans made the field for the first race at Bristol in 1961. Layman, driving a 1960 Dodge, wound up 42nd with handling problems. Dub, in a '61 Ford, broke a rocker arm and finished 29th. But Sherman piloted his '61 Ford to a ninth-place finish.

"In the early '60s, it wasn't banked as much, until they added that in 1969," Utsman said. "In the early '70s, it was asphalt, of course. They've got the concrete now a lot like it was then, because you could run up high or down low, either one. It was a good race track, even at that."

Utsman admitted his career got off to a somewhat shaky start.

"I actually started in 1960 at a little dirt track," Utsman said. "I ran a couple of races and had trouble in both of them. I didn't have money to fix the car right. It was a '46 Ford."

However, once he got the hang of things, Utsman was a force around eastern Tennessee, winning more than 300 short-track features during his career.

"We never had big sponsors or a lot of money back then," Utsman said. "Everybody built their own cars and maybe we were just a little bit sharper."

And even though his name isn't in the record books as the driver of record, John Utsman still considers the 1973 Volunteer 500 as his greatest day as a driver.

"My biggest thrill in NASCAR, by far, was getting in Benny's car at Bristol, because I lived about four or five miles from the track," Utsman said. "I ran a Ford all the time, and everybody else ran Chevrolets. I left the modifieds one time and went to Johnson City, and they told me I couldn't take a Ford and outrun the Chevrolets there -- and I did. And when I left Johnson City and started to run NASCAR, I was told I couldn't take a Ford and outrun the Chevelles. I don't know if people doubted me or the cars or what.

"Just proving to people I could do it and doing it right there in my hometown, was the biggest thrill -- by far -- I ever got in my life."

The End

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