This Week In The Maine Racing View
Sunday, March 21, 2004
"Racing
community mourns..."
Scott Fraser, one of
the most popular and talented stock car drivers in the Canadian Maritimes, lost
his life early Saturday morning in a snowmobile accident.
According to
reports, Fraser collided head-on with another snowmobile in the Wentworth Valley
region of Nova Scotia.
The son of Maritime
racing legend Frank Fraser, Scott was popular to the race fans and to fellow
drivers on both sides of the border. He made frequent visits to New England to
compete in major Pro Stock races, and more often than not, Scott would return to
his home in Shubenadie, Nova Scotia with a trophy in hand for a top three
finish.
Fraser gained
national attention in 2000 when he teamed up with fellow Maritime racer Rollie
MacDonald to compete on the ASA Series. Scott entered 19 ASA races in the 2000
and 2001 seasons, finishing a career best third at the famed 'Milwaukee Mile' in
2000.
In 1999 at the
Oxford (Maine) Plains Speedway, Scott finished third in the "OXFORD
250". He won the Pro All Stars Series (PASS) "Octoberfest 200" at
the Thompson (Connecticut) International Speedway in 2002 and won the PASS
"150" at the New Brunswick International Speedway last July 5th.
In what became his
final Pro Stock race in New England, Scott led 32 laps in the "Big Dawg
Challenge" at the Wiscasset (Maine) Raceway last October. He would
eventually finish 20th.
Our deepest
sympathies go out to his family and many friends.
Cards of sympathy
can be sent to: Family of Scott Fraser - P. O. Box 104 - Shubenacadie, Nova
Scotia BON 2HO.
"Bahre back
home..."
New Hampshire
International Speedway owner Bob Bahre was released from the hospital this week
and will continue his recovery from injuries suffered in a January auto accident
at home.
The Chevrolet Blazer
Bahre was driving went off the road in Brownfield (located in western Maine). He
was returning to his Paris, Maine home from the speedway in Loudon, New
Hampshire. Bahre sustained a concussion, rib injuries, a minor fracture of back
vertebrae and a fractured ankle.
Cards and letters of
get well wishes can be sent to New Hampshire International Speedway - P.O. Box
7888 - Loudon, N. H. 03307.
"Hall bound
in Georgia..."
One can almost be
tempted to "bet the farm" that few auto racing fans in Maine have ever
heard of a race car driver named Eddie MacDonald. And, I do not mean the Eddie
MacDonald who competes on the NASCAR Busch North Series and whose family owns
Lee (New Hampshire) USA Speedway.
I am referring to
the Eddie MacDonald who raced at Beech Ridge Speedway, Oxford Plains Speedway
and other dirt tracks in Maine in the early 1950's.
When I was about
five or six years old, the name Eddie MacDonald was etched forever in my young
mind. It wasn't because he won a race or two (he won often in those days) or he
was involved in a spectacular accident (I'm sure he had a couple). After all,
specific events do not stick in a young boy's mind unless it involves getting a
new bike or special toy.
No, what permanently
etched Eddie MacDonald's name in my young mind was the car he drove...more
specifically, the nickname of his car - "The Pink Lady".
Yes, the car was
painted pink and I can remember vividly the late Don Kent, the announcer at
Beech Ridge, saying "driving the Pink Lady is Eddie MacDonald" or
"Eddie MacDonald in the Pink Lady."
Oh, there was a
number but I could never remember what his number was. It was just "Eddie
MacDonald in the Pink Lady". In the last couple of years I have seen
pictures of Eddie and the Pink Lady...the car number was "12".
As much as I looked
forward to seeing "Eddie MacDonald in the Pink Lady" each week in the
early 1950's, he disappeared from the Maine racing scene. Back then, there were
no racing papers or racing writers who kept fans informed of the racing news.
About eight or ten
years later, the early 1960's, my father subscribed to a weekly racing paper
titled the "Southern Motorsports Journal". As family we read the
"Journal" to find out how the "big boys" were doing -
Fireball Roberts, Lee Petty, Curtis Turner, Buck Baker, Richard Petty, etc.
It was in the
"Journal" when a familiar name appeared - Eddie MacDonald. I
discovered the Eddie MacDonald who I was reading about racing and winning races
on the short tracks of Georgia, was the same "Eddie MacDonald in the Pink
Lady". I couldn't wait for my father to get the "Journal" so I
could see if MacDonald won again.
Turn the calendar
ahead to the summer of 2002. Through my involvement with the Maine Vintage Race
Car Association, I received an e-mail from a racing historian in Georgia asking
if I had ever heard of a fellow who raced in Maine in the early 1950's by the
name of Eddie MacDonald?
I responded, telling
this person of my memories of "Eddie MacDonald and the Pink Lady".
Through more e-mails, I discovered MacDonald "disappeared" from the
Maine race tracks when "Uncle Sam" relocated the Army private to
Georgia in 1954. I was also informed that he and his wife "summer" in
western Maine.
In early July of
2002, I received a phone call from Eddie MacDonald and had the pleasure of
meeting him last summer.
I have since
discovered Eddie MacDonald not only won numerous short track championships and
won hundreds of races throughout the southeast, but he raced with NASCAR on the
old Daytona beach course and on the high-banks of Daytona International
Speedway.
What triggered this
journey down memory lane was the announcement two weeks ago of Eddie MacDonald
and seven other Georgia racing notables being elected to the Georgia Automobile
Racing Hall of Fame.
I know of one little
boy who is smiling.
That is it for this week.
Email comments and info to:
bobrace48@hotmail.com
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