Everyone who has been around drag racers knows that you give them an inch
and they will take a mile. Plus we racers never do anything in moderation --
it has to be overboard. My friend Jeff Duncan was telling me this story of a
well-intended contest at an annual car show. The car show is held each year
in Sulphur Springs, Texas, in conjunction with the town Dairy Festival. To
give you an example how big dairy farming is in Sulphur Springs, they have a
dairy museum -- no kidding. But back to my story. The contest held at the
cow show was a potato relay. The intent of the potato relay contest was to
see who could pick the potatoes the fastest over a set course against the
clock. The driver would drive the car while the passenger would use a pick
to stab the potatoes and pick them up.
The contest went on for a couple of years without a hitch with just
street cars taking part in the contest. But as time went by some drag racers
started entering the contest with their street-based race cars. Rather
quickly, the laid back potato relay became a wild, no holds barred event.
There would be Pro Mod style burnouts prior to the actual relay and endless
dry hops like the days of the Super Stock rosin burnouts. My buddy Jeff even
used nitrous on his ‘68 Chevelle and purged the system to drive the crowd
wild. He won the relay a couple of years in a row doing this.
But like drag racing classes that are no holds barred, you reach a point
where overkill steps in. In the potato relay it was when local drag racer
Eugene Edwards, a real nice guy, entered his ‘55 T-Bird. Edwards' T-Bird
was a full chassis, all fiberglass car with a Doug Nash five speed! Eugene
also took the passenger door off the car to allow the passenger to stab the
potatoes. Needless to say, Eugene slaughtered the rest of the field with his
trick nine-second capable vehicle. That was the last time the potato relay
was held at Sulphur Springs. The potato relay was another victim of drag
racer overkill all in the quest for a win, even though it was not on a drag
strip!
Danny White