- Parnelli Jones
Infobox NASCAR driver
Name = Rufus "Parnelli" Jones
Birthdate = birth date and age|1933|8|12
Birthplace = flagicon|USA Texarkana,Arkansas
Best_Cup_Pos = 33rd - 1958 (Grand National)
Cup_Wins = 4
Cup_Top_Tens = 11
Cup_Poles = 3
First_Cup_Race = 1956Merced Fairgrounds
First_Cup_Win = 1957Kitsap County Airport (Bremerton)
Last_Cup_Win = 1967Motor Trend 500 (Riverside)
Last_Cup_Race = 1970Motor Trend 500 (Riverside)
Awards = 1990 International Motorsports Hall of Fame Inductee1991 inducted in the National Sprint Car Hall of Fame
1992 inducted in the
Motorsports Hall of Fame of America 1961
Indianapolis 500 co-Rookie of the Year1963
Indianapolis 500 winner1964 USAC stock car champion1960, 1961, 1962 USAC Sprint Car Series Champion
1976 inductee in the
Off-road Motorsports Hall of Fame 2001 inducted into the
West Coast Stock Car Hall of Fame inducted in the
National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame
Years_In_Cup = 12
Total_Cup_Races = 34Rufus Parnell "Parnelli" Jones (born
August 12 ,1933 inTexarkana, Arkansas ), is a retired American racing driver and racecar owner. He is most remembered for his 1963Indianapolis 500 win, and almost winning the 1967 Indy 500 in a turbine car. [http://www.worthyofhonor.com/Inductees/Parnelli_Jones.htm Biography] at theNational Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame ] He is also remembered for bringing the stock block engine to USACSprint car racing as one of the "Chevy Twins" withJim Hurtubise .In his career, Parnelli Jones won races in many types of vehicles: sports cars, IndyCars, sprint cars, midget cars, off-road vehicles, and stock cars. He is associated with the famous
Boss 302 Mustang with his wins using the engine in the 1970s. Jones' sonP. J. Jones was also a diverse driver, with IndyCar andNASCAR starts. His other sonPage Jones was an up-and-coming driver before suffering career ending (and life-threatening) injuries in a sprint car at the 4-Crown Nationals, and has been in rehabilitation, working with his father-in-law.Driving career
Jones' family moved to
Torrance, California , where he grew up (and still lives). He was nicknamed Parnelli by his boyhood friend Billy Calder, who hoped that the Jones family would not discover their son was racing cars as a 17 year old minor. [http://offroadmotorsportshalloffame.com/inductees.fx?id=10 Biography] at theOff-road Motorsports Hall of Fame ] Jones participated in his first race in a Jalopy race atCarroll Speedway inGardena, California . He developed his racing skills by racing in many different classes in the 1950s, including 15stock car racing wins in the NASCAR Pacific Coast Late Model Series. [http://www.stockcarreunion.com/inductees.html Biography] at theWest Coast Stock Car Hall of Fame , RetrievedNovember 8 2007 ]His first major championship was the Midwest region Sprint car title in 1960. The title caught the attention of
promoter J. C. Agajanian , who became his sponsor. [ [http://www.motorsportshalloffame.com/halloffame/1990/Parnelli_Jones_main.htm Biography] at theInternational Motorsports Hall of Fame ] He began racing atIndianapolis in 1961.Jones was named the
1961 Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year, an honor that he shared withBobby Marshman .In 1962, he was the first driver to qualify over 150 mph at the
Indianapolis 500 , winning the pole position at a speed of convert|150.370|mi/h|km/h|abbr=on.In the 1963
Indianapolis 500 , he started on the pole. This was the year the controversial Lotus-Ford rear-engined cars made their first appearance, and had ruffled the Indianapolis establishment. With Scotsman Jim Clark in a Lotus-Ford closing on Jones in the waning laps, Jones' car developed a horizontal leak in the external oil reservoir. At that moment, driver Eddie Sachs crashed on the oil-slickened racing surface and brought out a yellow caution flag, slowing the field. Agajanian, Jones' car owner, argued with starter Harlan Fengler not to issue a black flag, insisting the oil level had dropped below the level of the crack, and that the leak had stopped. Jones went on to win, and the Lotus-Ford team, acknowledging Jones' clear superiority in the event, declined to protest despite some hard feelings. Legendary vehicle fabricatorBill Stroppe built aMercury Marauder USAC Stock car for Jones. Jones won the 1963Pikes Peak International Hill Climb in the car, and broke the stock car speed record.In 1964 he won 7 races (and tied for a win) on his way to the USAC Stock car crown. He won the
Turkey Night Grand Prix midget car event.Mercury (car) decided to pull out of stock car racing after the season.He won five of the nine midget car events that he entered in 1966, including the
Turkey Night Grand Prix . He finished fourteenth in the final points despite competing in only nine of 65 events.In 1967, he drove in the
Indianapolis 500 for ownerAndy Granatelli in the revolutionary Pratt & WhitneyTurbine . Jones dominated the race but dropped out with three laps to go when a small, inexpensive transmission bearing broke. After 1968, turbine-powered cars were legislated out of competitiveness.Also in 1967, as part of his stock car contract with the Lincoln-Mercury division of the Ford Motor Company, Jones drove a Mercury Cougar in the then-new Trans Am series. In April, Jones dueled with teammate, friend and rival Dan Gurney in a brutal, 4 1/2-hour event at Green Valley, Texas in 113-degree heat, losing by inches to Gurney.
Stroppe suggested that Jones try his hand at
off-road racing in front of a large crowd at a Christmas party in 1967. Jones at first said no, since he had enough dirt. Stroppe suggested that maybe off-road racing was too hard for Jones, and the challenge started Jones' off-road career. Jones and Stroppe teamed up for the convert|711|mi|km|sing=onStar Dust 7/11 race across theNevada desert in early 1968. Jones had never driven or pre-run theFord Bronco . Jones hit a dry wash at full speed, which broke the wheels and blew out the front tires. Later Jones would have a guest appearance in the originalGone in 60 Seconds featuring him and his Bronco which was stolen in the movie. Jones had become hooked on off-road racing. Jones subsequently retired from driving IndyCars.Jones entered the 1968
NORRA Mexican 1000 (nowBaja 1000 ). Jones led until the convert|150|mi|km|sing=on marker. TheOff-road Motorsports Hall of Fame describes Jones' racing style: "Jones and Stroppe had to find a way to keep their vehicles in one piece. During races Jones would push the vehicles at maximum speeds until they gave away, with Stroppe telling him at top volume the entire time to take it easier on the vehicle."Jones had a special car fabricated that looked like a Bronco, but had racing parts that could withstand rigorous jarring that off-road vehicles endure. Jones named the vehicle "Big Oly" after his sponsor
Olympia Beer . Jones used the vehicle to lead the Mexican 1000 from start to finish in a new record time of 14 hours and 59 minutes.Jones had major wins in the 1973 season. He won his second Mexican 1000 in 16 hours and 42 minutes. He also won the 1973
Baja 500 andMint 400 off-road events. Jones had a major accident atSCORE International 's 1974 Baja 500, and stepped away from full-time off-road racing to become an owner.Jones raced SCCA Trans Am sedans owned by Bud Moore: Mercury Cougar (1967) and Ford Mustang (1969--1971). Parnelli's dominance of the extremely competitive 1970 season brought Ford the manufacturer's championship.
Driving career summary
Jones retired with six IndyCar wins and twelve pole positions, four wins in 34
NASCAR starts [ [http://www.racing-reference.com/driver?id=jonespa01 NASCAR stats at racing-reference.com] ] , 25 midget car feature wins in occasional races between 1960 and 1967 , and 25 career sprint car wins . His fifteen wins is eighth on the all-time in NASCAR Pacific Coast Late Model history.Car owner
Jones started
Vel’s Parnelli Jones Racing , which won theIndianapolis 500 again as an owner in 1970 and 1971 with driverAl Unser driving theJohnny Lightning special. The team also won the 1971, 1972, and 1973 USAC National Championships.Jones owned the
Parnelli Formula One race team from late 1974 to early 1976, although it achieved little success.Jones returned to off-road racing as owner of Walker Evans' 1976 SCORE truck, and Evans won the championship. They teamed up for the 1977 CORE Class 2 championship.
Jones owned vehicles that took class wins at the Baja 500 and Baja 1000. His USAC Dirt Car won two championships and the Triple Crown three times.
Career awards
Jones is inducted in over 20 Halls of Fame including:
*theOff-road Motorsports Hall of Fame (1976)
*theInternational Motorsports Hall of Fame (1990)
*theNational Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame (1990)
*the National Sprint Car Hall of Fame (1991)
*theMotorsports Hall of Fame of America (1992)
*theWest Coast Stock Car Hall of Fame (2002)Businessman
Jones owned and operated several successful businesses. He owned Parnelli Jones Inc., which operated 47 retail Parnelli Jones Tire Centers in four states. Parnelli Jones Enterprises was a chain of Firestone Racing Tires in 14 Western United States. Parnelli Jones Wholesale was a reseller which sold and distributed shock absorbers, passenger car tires, and other automotive products to retail tire dealers.
2007 Ford Mustang Limited Edition
Saleen, Incorporated, in Irvine, California, produced a limited edition (500 unit) 2007 Saleen S302 PJ commemorating Parnelli's 1970 SCCA Ford Mustang Boss 302 racer. This limited-production mustang comes with a stroked out version of the stock Mustang GT 281 c.i. engine. With the new displacement reaching 302 c.i. the new engine power rating is convert|400|hp|abbr=on and 390lb/ft of torque. Other special performance enhancements to this car include a special Watts-Link suspension unique to the 1970 Boss Mustang used by Parnelli Jones.
Indy 500 results
References
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