I smashed the barrier at 54 miles per hour. The Mustang’s nose rode the wall skyward as my body squeezed into the belts. In those final few microseconds my emotions cycled through panic, fury, and, finally, guilt. I was sharing a car with two close friends and my wreck last weekend derailed not just my race, but theirs, too.
When people ask why I devote considerable resources to car racing, I tell them about the thrill, but also that motorsports supplies all the richness of human emotions yet in the end has few life-altering consequences. A first place or a fast lap is like a lottery win and even though I’m far from a professional—I call myself a “pretty good mediocre driver”—I feel electrically charged after a race. A broken car or, far worse, a crash is awful to be sure, but assuming no injuries, which are thankfully rare, the weekend is a blip and life goes on.
This crash, however, was different. I simply drove too fast entering Turn 6 at Watkins Glen raceway. At any other circuit, I likely would have harmlessly drifted wide and off the track, but the Glen punishes mistakes. Guardrails line the track and in some places are adjacent to the pavement. Turn 6 has a few feet of grass between the track and the wall, which is lined with a single layer of impact-absorbing tires. As the Mustang slid off the pavement, I thought I’d slowed enough that the hit might be a glancing blow. A second or so before impact, however, I reached 120 mph, and my internal speed compass was way off. BOOM! I barreled in and hit the barrier at 54 mph, according to the data recorder.
To put that in context, if I’d hypothetically dropped the car from a seven-story balcony, it would be traveling at roughly 54 mph when it hit the ground. The impact bent several critical chassis parts. Our professional crew weren’t sure it was fixable. My mistake happened on Thursday afternoon, during practice for the weekend’s race. We were just getting started when I blew it.
The car in the crash was a rented vehicle; it seems the crew repairing the vehicle came with it. I am wondering about the relationship between the rented vehicle, the insurance (personal vs. rental companies) covering losses, and the repairs to continue racing.
Glad you’re okay, LW. And your thoughts on how to handle crashing (or, by extension, any incident in life where we tend to put undo blame on ourselves) are spot on, IMO. While we should all exercise caution, we need to experience all of the emotions you cite in order to live a full life. Bent fenders are all a part of the bigger picture (plus they make great wall hangers). Drive it like you stole it is more – way more – than just a catchy meme!
Excellent article, Larry, and I always enjoy your stories. Just one question, couldn’t you just change the tire after one blew? I realize some newer cars don’t have a spare, so maybe that’s the answer.
Turn 6? Turn 6? I wanna say that’s after the chicane they put in before the big left sweeper? (To slow everyone down after Tommy Kendall’s big crash in the Corvette GTP?)
Been too long since I’ve raced at the Glen, but glad you were in a big Ford Taxi Cab 😂
I never liked those damn blue steel walls in my Formula Vee – glad I never nosed into one. My neighbor just gave me a free C4 Vette but making it a track car is probably a really bad idea… especially since I’m likely to bend the suspension parts I wanna harvest from it… 😂
Glad you are OK and your fancy arrive & drive crew got you back on track! 🏆🏆🏆
Good that the whole weekend wasn’t wasted and also that you weren’t hurt – except perhaps your pride – it looks like you lost concentration and drifted off your line and missed your turn in point. It happens.
The most important thing is you didn’t blame the car. Ford would not have been happy about that. As they say, “It Happens”. Glad no serious injuries. Anybody who races knows, or should, that accidents are part of the game.
In the early 90’s on a tight budget I built a pro rally pick up truck. Our goal was to run all the events in the national series. We were competitive so started to push the limits and this dang tree moved into the road. That fender still hangs in the shop! But knowing we were going for it and pushing the limit pulled our team together. And made me a better driver. As long as all that hurt was our ego and few parts it was all good.
Love your honesty!
The car in the crash was a rented vehicle; it seems the crew repairing the vehicle came with it. I am wondering about the relationship between the rented vehicle, the insurance (personal vs. rental companies) covering losses, and the repairs to continue racing.
It all depends but in most racing if you crash it, you pay for it.
I love your little stories. Keep doing it!
What a great and interesting article! Also, a measure of self introspection we can all learn from and use! Thanks for sharing!!!!
Glad you’re okay, LW. And your thoughts on how to handle crashing (or, by extension, any incident in life where we tend to put undo blame on ourselves) are spot on, IMO. While we should all exercise caution, we need to experience all of the emotions you cite in order to live a full life. Bent fenders are all a part of the bigger picture (plus they make great wall hangers). Drive it like you stole it is more – way more – than just a catchy meme!
Excellent article, Larry, and I always enjoy your stories. Just one question, couldn’t you just change the tire after one blew? I realize some newer cars don’t have a spare, so maybe that’s the answer.
Thoroughly enjoyed the article Great racing buddies with a side of ‘good father’
Thanks
Turn 6? Turn 6? I wanna say that’s after the chicane they put in before the big left sweeper? (To slow everyone down after Tommy Kendall’s big crash in the Corvette GTP?)
Been too long since I’ve raced at the Glen, but glad you were in a big Ford Taxi Cab 😂
I never liked those damn blue steel walls in my Formula Vee – glad I never nosed into one. My neighbor just gave me a free C4 Vette but making it a track car is probably a really bad idea… especially since I’m likely to bend the suspension parts I wanna harvest from it… 😂
Glad you are OK and your fancy arrive & drive crew got you back on track! 🏆🏆🏆
Thank you!
Good that the whole weekend wasn’t wasted and also that you weren’t hurt – except perhaps your pride – it looks like you lost concentration and drifted off your line and missed your turn in point. It happens.
Amor fati . . . and move on. Stuff happens.
The most important thing is you didn’t blame the car. Ford would not have been happy about that. As they say, “It Happens”. Glad no serious injuries. Anybody who races knows, or should, that accidents are part of the game.
Video link?
Thank you for the very informative CRASH post, so glad you are OK physically & mentally Larry.
“just being there was our win, and we knew it.”
This part is where I began to wipe my eyes.
Glad you’re ok. Looks like an early apex on 6. The Glen is unforgiving, especially turn 9 at speed.
In the early 90’s on a tight budget I built a pro rally pick up truck. Our goal was to run all the events in the national series. We were competitive so started to push the limits and this dang tree moved into the road. That fender still hangs in the shop! But knowing we were going for it and pushing the limit pulled our team together. And made me a better driver. As long as all that hurt was our ego and few parts it was all good.
Love your honesty!
hahaha. Those dang trees!