I am working on the Program for Thursday and can not seem to find the answer to this question anywhere…
Who won the first 3 Clyde Hart Memorial Races… (1999, 2000, 2001)…
If anyone can help… I would greatly appreciate it!
I am working on the Program for Thursday and can not seem to find the answer to this question anywhere…
Who won the first 3 Clyde Hart Memorial Races… (1999, 2000, 2001)…
If anyone can help… I would greatly appreciate it!
1999 Wayne Anderson
2000 Jimmy Cope
2001 James Powell III
I think…
http://ptcs.net/fascar1/index2.php?option=com_content&do_pdf=1&id=52
I appreciate the help but those are actually the Governors Cup Winners from those years… the sheet is titled Clyde Hart Memorial… yet it is the History of Governors Cup…!!!
I do believe Junior Hanley was the winner in 1999.
Sorry…wasn’t sure. I’ll keep searching…
Seconding Jimmy Cope as the winner in 2000, when the race was held during SpeedWeeks I do believe.
And for 2001, didn’t Mike Fritts win in the 27x, chased to the line by Dick Anderson?
Thanks to Jim Jones Photography… (who better than the man that took the pictures) I can’t believe I didn’t think to ask him prior to today…
1999 - David Rogers #11
2000 - Wayne Anderson #84
2001 - Mike Fritts #27
All 9 Winner’s Circle Photos will appear in this week’s FASCAR Event Program… available at the track on Thursday… Just $3.00!
I’m only trying to help, but the Clyde Hart Memorial was part of Speedweeks back in 1999. This is from the Daytona News Journal.
CANADIAN DRIVER TAKES CLYDE HART MEMORIAL
Article 1 of 1 found
Staff Report
February 16, 1999; Page 02A
Article ID: 9902160299
Canadian Junior Hanley put his Chevrolet in Victory Lane on Friday night during the 33rd Annual World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing at New Smyrna Speedway.
Hanley took home the winner’s share of the purse in capturing the first Clyde Hart Memorial 100 Super Late Model race. The race started with Clyde Hart’s widow, Dolly Hart, giving the command for the cars to start their engines and grandson, Andrew Hart, dropping the first green flag on the 40-car field.